Global Warming: The Decade We Lost Earth

Ғылым және технология

The story of how one man cost us a world with less than 2°C of warming in 1989. To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit www.brilliant.org/simonclark. The first 200 of you will get 20% off Brilliant's annual premium subscription.
This is a follow-up video to Global Warming: An Inconvenient History, going into much more detail of events from 1979 to 1989. In particular this is the story of the "villain" of climate change, a man you've likely never heard of before. But is that a fair description? You be the judge.
Previous video on the Inconvenient History of Global Warming: • Global Warming: An Inc...
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Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com
Some stock footage courtesy of Getty.
Directed and edited by Luke Negus.
This video essay in the style of Jon Bois and BobbyBroccoli is about the history of climate change, and how John Sununu is the villain of the story, preventing a binding agreement on carbon emissions at the Noordwijk conference of 1989. Who is to blame for climate change? Who caused global warming? Why was John Sununu so important? These questions and more are answered in this video about the history of science and global warming.
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Пікірлер: 2 900

  • @SimonClark
    @SimonClark Жыл бұрын

    If you enjoyed the video, please do give it a like and share it with people who you think will also enjoy it! This is a story I think everyone should hear. If you would like to support my work then you can do so by: - Signing up with Brilliant: www.brilliant.org/simonclark - Buy my book on the history of atmospheric science, Firmament: geni.us/firmament - Sign up for my monthly newsletter: eepurl.com/ihPiX5

  • @GhostOnTheHalfShell

    @GhostOnTheHalfShell

    Жыл бұрын

    You should do an interview with Steve Keen to do a deep dive on how badly mainstream economists have trivialized the economic consequences. it's mind boggling.

  • @stevebloom55

    @stevebloom55

    Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video, thanks!

  • @oleonard7319

    @oleonard7319

    Жыл бұрын

    and we are watching the same thing happen all over again in real time

  • @KSMinhoka

    @KSMinhoka

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey Simon, love your stuff! I've seen a video on DonutMedia about some eFuel/synthetic gasoline that Porsche is making in Chile which is "eco friendly": they captures CO2 from the atmosphere and water and run the whole thing on green energy (why they are in Chile), but running an engine still ends up releasing CO2, so it ends up being "neutral". Would love your analysis on efficiency of the whole process, since there is the whole tradeoff of green energy vs distance to customers and such.

  • @bweresquirrel8279

    @bweresquirrel8279

    Жыл бұрын

    Good report. One minor correction: John Sununu's name should be pronounced with the stress on the second syllable. Older US news broadcasts consistently pronounce it that way, such as the introduction in this interview: kzread.info/dash/bejne/i6J3ktWeg6S_g8o.html

  • @jamescook2199
    @jamescook2199 Жыл бұрын

    If the tobacco industry could be fined hundreds of millions for deliberately hiding the deadliness of tobacco, how much is the price for knowing you are creating a climatic apocalypse and funding "research" to say you're not for fifty years?

  • @Brigtzen

    @Brigtzen

    Жыл бұрын

    ...man this is too depressing knowing noone will be put to justice for this

  • @dragonwukong9

    @dragonwukong9

    Жыл бұрын

    It's really sad. Because we don't value the things we already destroyed. For example, a forest being deforested and the deforested land is used as a farm or for other uses. But the amount of trees that were destroyed, won't be reversed by re planting them. What's lost is lost. So, the price they need to pay is impossible because it's gone. So there's no way to tell

  • @iantaakalla8180

    @iantaakalla8180

    Жыл бұрын

    The next best thing is to ensure gasoline and other products like gasoline will never be used again as fuel sources, but as those fuel sources are one of the most energy-dense source of fuels they will always be needed for some stuff. We can’t even get a symbolic victory of learning from our lesson and ensuring we can rid ourselves of the objects that were marketed that got us into this place. We might lessen land transportation, use nuclear energy and some other renewable sources when appropriate, learn how to reconstruct forests and seas to be sort of back to the way they were, hunt overpopulating stuff to give others a chance, and maybe even successfully eradicate invasive species and even heavily restrict overseas travel, but all are mitigatory efforts. We will never have a good climate for humans for a very long time nor will we realize the actual extent of damage or what we lost, and we can’t even make efforts to at least wean off permanently gasoline and diesel and natural gas simply because they are too energy-dense. In short? They’ve pretty much won. They got their profits, and given that everything is monopolized now, their companies will always stand.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    Жыл бұрын

    An inapt analogy, given that the exact opposite religion(anti-smoking tobacco)gave rise to the simple lie that smoking tobacco*causes* cancer, which is demonstrably untrue - certainly in the cases of the writer who smoked billions of cigarettes without any cancer for seventy plus years.

  • @tristanridley1601

    @tristanridley1601

    Жыл бұрын

    The traditional punishment only happens after civilization falls. Mob violence from the survivors toward the blamed.

  • @liadeindadani6913
    @liadeindadani6913 Жыл бұрын

    The fact that I could've grown up in a world that was already fighting climate change instead of a world where we're barely starting is crazy Edit: I don't want people to read this message and get all hopeless, idk exactly how to word it, but just because we're starting now, doesn't mean we shouldn't start. There is still time to make a change and we should keep fighting to make a change. It sucks that the stupid fuel industry has really given us a setback, but that's only more of a reason to fight back. We can't let those assholes win.

  • @juskahusk2247

    @juskahusk2247

    Жыл бұрын

    So true. It's like we have just started running a marathon when the other runner is already at the finishing line.

  • @arnoldfrackenmeyer8157

    @arnoldfrackenmeyer8157

    Жыл бұрын

    Great advances have been made. 1950's and 1960's were the two worst decades for smog. The clean air act of 1970 was passed unanimously by both parties. And gradually America's air quality has Improved. No way I would go back to that era.

  • @oneirishpoet

    @oneirishpoet

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry but I'm afraid my generation failed you. I'm 63 years old now and a lifelong environmental activist but the vast majority of Americans of my generation have done little to nothing to change their ways... At this point I'm very glad my wife and I decided not to have children so we don't have to explain to them why they're so screwed 😢

  • @MH-up1xe

    @MH-up1xe

    Жыл бұрын

    Humans are producing more co2 daily. We are doing the reverse of progress.

  • @liadeindadani6913

    @liadeindadani6913

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oneirishpoet I just hope that maybe my generation save even the tiniest little bit for the next one

  • @jeanlapoint8297
    @jeanlapoint8297 Жыл бұрын

    I live in Massachusetts. I remember when Sununu was Governor of New Hampshire and Massachusetts was complaining about the pollution coming down the Merrimack River from the industrial cities of Concord, Manchester and Nashua. Sununu said: “pollution is just a byproduct of progress”. This is what I think of when I hear his name.

  • @PhilipX2030

    @PhilipX2030

    10 ай бұрын

    And now in numerous cities of China, they drive cars with headlights on during the day because the smog is so thick… And all aquatic life has been poisoned, as well as the people; the price of progress with fossil fuels is tragic

  • @ValMartinIreland

    @ValMartinIreland

    9 ай бұрын

    Don't confuse carbon with pollution.

  • @Mechanicaa

    @Mechanicaa

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ValMartinIreland Excess carbon is pollution, 1, and 2, I assume any pollution in water would be visible, meaning it'll likely not be carbon.

  • @mnessenche

    @mnessenche

    9 ай бұрын

    "pollution is just a byproduct of progress" lmao, Sununu could have just been a Soviet party leader in the 1970s/80s with that sentence XD, Soviet Sununu XD.

  • @peterjames1088

    @peterjames1088

    8 ай бұрын

    He was simply pond scum.

  • @Clone683
    @Clone683 Жыл бұрын

    "Your government is f*cking this up" should go down in history as a quote that perfectly sums up how the US handled this

  • @ey67

    @ey67

    Жыл бұрын

    Like they do most things.

  • @arcanondrum6543

    @arcanondrum6543

    Жыл бұрын

    Ooooh, I'll bet that the Oil Companies that funded the sabotage evidence would be rilly, rilly scared if we abolished an elected government. I prefer that we abolish ignorance in Voters and we imprison proven criminals IN government. There's a reason why people abolished monarchies and chose self-rule and the elected government. Catch up, won't you?

  • @IndigoBellyDance

    @IndigoBellyDance

    Жыл бұрын

    To b fair Most governments r f*cking this up, so US is in good/poor/lazy/selfish company

  • @dontcare3430

    @dontcare3430

    Жыл бұрын

    History will be read by nobody .

  • @Ragga0the0yan

    @Ragga0the0yan

    Жыл бұрын

    ..how govornments handle everything

  • @mathijsfrank9268
    @mathijsfrank9268 Жыл бұрын

    I've always thought that the fixing of the ozone hole problem was one of the few (if not only) moments in history where governments came together to fix a problem for the better of society in stead of purely helping the people in charge. Hearing that it basically only happened because du pont saw an opportunity for profit makes a lot more sense and makes me very sad....

  • @belalugrisi1614

    @belalugrisi1614

    Жыл бұрын

    The stratospheric ozone is in the worst condition ever. Don't be fooled. Every rocket launch shreds more ozone, and nuclear testing was much more devastating to the ozone layer than hairspray or refrigerant. UV-C is now hitting Earth's surface. Best to you!

  • @christinearmington

    @christinearmington

    Жыл бұрын

    🥺

  • @belalugrisi1614

    @belalugrisi1614

    Жыл бұрын

    @@christinearmington 🤗

  • @nsant3790

    @nsant3790

    Жыл бұрын

    Plant more trees and plants nearby your surrounding to fight the Climate warming issues 🙏🏽🇮🇳

  • @alwynwatson6119

    @alwynwatson6119

    Жыл бұрын

    It gets worse. If oil company executives weren’t stuck in the past they would’ve seen the potential profitability of using their existing offshore and drilling technology to provide the world with abundant sustainable energy from offshore wind and geothermal. So for climate change to exist at all The people in power from the 1970s onwards would’ve had to have been stupid as well as evil.

  • @FlesHBoX
    @FlesHBoX Жыл бұрын

    If anything, I think this shows that the real "villain" in this story is Nirenberg. Sununu did what he did out of ignorance. However Nirenberg, like you said, knew what he was doing. If anything, Sununu was merely an ignorant pawn manipulated and set in motion by a man who wanted this to happen for whatever reason.

  • @nerobernardino88

    @nerobernardino88

    Жыл бұрын

    Big Oil's cash.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Big Oil / Skull and Bones / military industrial complex... Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the MIC anybody?

  • @somebodyhere3160

    @somebodyhere3160

    Жыл бұрын

    if anything, the real villain of the story is just human greed.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    @@somebodyhere3160 100%. The military industrial complex and corruption being the prime consequence of greed.

  • @DSAK55

    @DSAK55

    Жыл бұрын

    I am old enough to know Sununu . He was a typical GOP prick who would do whatever is required to protect industry from "tree huggers"

  • @idraote
    @idraote Жыл бұрын

    One of the many sad outcomes is that these people, who deliberately lied to citizens causing enormous damage, will never pay for their crimes. There should be a wall of shame with these people quoted as the criminals they were/are.

  • @garyanthony3627

    @garyanthony3627

    Жыл бұрын

    Completely agree

  • @elvispressley2365

    @elvispressley2365

    Жыл бұрын

    If they died, resurrect them and delete them again😅

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree, I am one of those people who believes that there should be statues of, and monuments to, horrible people that have damaged this world, but with evident plaques describing exactly who they were and what damage they caused. Every bust of Hitler was removed after the war but I think every major capital should get one situated near their government building as a warning of what happens when you abuse the power of those buildings. People might be less inclined to be malevolent if they were reminded that their infamy would stay in the public eye for a very long time.

  • @janetannerevans2320

    @janetannerevans2320

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah kinda like covid.

  • @IndifferentAgainstTheMachine

    @IndifferentAgainstTheMachine

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like your talking about the Covid pandemic. my bad

  • @tordkarl
    @tordkarl Жыл бұрын

    “People of privilege will always risk their complete destruction rather than surrender any material part of their advantage.” - John Kenneth Galbraith

  • @garyanthony3627

    @garyanthony3627

    Жыл бұрын

    Guy McPherson also said this and I believe to be true

  • @Matty18795

    @Matty18795

    Жыл бұрын

    A bit more of a detailed video kzread.info/dash/bejne/q4Oc0q6PdsWnd84.html

  • @scottdavis3571

    @scottdavis3571

    Жыл бұрын

    By destroying us all!

  • @MylesKillis

    @MylesKillis

    9 ай бұрын

    Yup because only people who’d rather get rich or die trying get and stay rich

  • @briancrowther3272

    @briancrowther3272

    8 ай бұрын

    I think he is the guy who warned against, "the miltary industrial complex" and their power to destroy USA demorcay.

  • @NotSoMax
    @NotSoMax Жыл бұрын

    This kinda hurts to watch, seeing how far back we knew it was a problem all laid out in this way is kinda heartbreaking especially when viewed today, when it’s now a very partisan issue. It’s so frustrating that if just a few things had gone slightly differently we could be living in a much better world today

  • @ketsi3079

    @ketsi3079

    Жыл бұрын

    We still live in that better world but after 2050 we not

  • @mushyroom9569

    @mushyroom9569

    Жыл бұрын

    The funny thing is that it’s really not a partisan issue. There’s no pro-nuclear party, just parties that pretend to care and parties that don’t.

  • @alwynwatson6119

    @alwynwatson6119

    Жыл бұрын

    If we done a few things slightly differently in the Victorian era we would’ve stopped burning fossil fuels by 1900. Not because of climate change you understand but because fossil fuels are not economically viable when compared to the alternatives that could’ve been developed in the Victorian era. But they’re also an ethical to. Coal was dug up using slavery and child labour.

  • @ajbrady4357

    @ajbrady4357

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mushyroom9569 mAkE tHe cArS aLL EvS tHaTlL fIx ThE iSsuE

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    The carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @PeidosFTW
    @PeidosFTW Жыл бұрын

    it always comes down to reaganomics, amazing, this man only missed

  • @Pantherblack

    @Pantherblack

    Жыл бұрын

    Unless the goal was doing nothing but damage, in which case he never missed and continues not to.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    First thing Ronald the clown did was talking down the solar panels from the roof of the White House... Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @PeidosFTW

    @PeidosFTW

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 no you dont understand, the military is totally necessary, we definetly need them to overthrow slightly left wing governments in the global south

  • @GeahkBurchill

    @GeahkBurchill

    Жыл бұрын

    So did John Hinkley.

  • @kevinmhadley

    @kevinmhadley

    Жыл бұрын

    Conservatives love Reagan. But he nearly tripled the National Debt and started the decline of the middle class. GHW Bush was correct when he called Reagan’s “trickle down” economics Voodoo. There is no trickling down. What we get when we reduce taxes on the very wealthy is a bubbling up.

  • @scaevolaludens679
    @scaevolaludens67911 ай бұрын

    "If you demand a villain your man..." "RONALD REAGAN!" "...is John Sununu" "oh."

  • @conhill
    @conhill Жыл бұрын

    Simon, I teach climate change in universities. I also tell my students about what Reagon, Nirenberg, George C Marshall had done to fool people, but not in a way as compelling as you did. I am sure my students will enjoy watching this KZread video. Thanks so much for the great efforts. Bravo!

  • @luciagil97

    @luciagil97

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for educating people my age 🙏🏼 not many of my friends outside of academia believe me

  • @felipealarotta

    @felipealarotta

    9 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/Zoihx7SOj6-WndI.html

  • @luiscastro-my3iw

    @luiscastro-my3iw

    9 ай бұрын

    Please share your knowledge too if you can on this platform. Best.

  • @carleddison7479

    @carleddison7479

    9 ай бұрын

    One might presume that teaching involved at least some degree of accuracy in the dissemination of information to malleable young minds? Your comment displays room for improvement in this essential requirement. Namely, Reagan (not Reagon) and Nierenberg (not Nirenberg).

  • @NiceTriGuy

    @NiceTriGuy

    8 ай бұрын

    @@carleddison7479why bother with accuracy or truth when you can substitute brainwashing for teaching.

  • @kennygreening909
    @kennygreening909 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Simon, I am a meteorologist and really enjoy your videos. You do a phenomenal job at explaining the science of our atmosphere! I must say, I bought your book and would definitely recommend it for those who want to learn about the history of atmospheric science and the basics of how our atmosphere works.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope Simon mentioned the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @andrewtrip8617

    @andrewtrip8617

    8 ай бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 by what metric is carbon toxic. When all life is dependent on it .toxicity is measured by the LD 50 test .what exactly has carbon to do with the military apart from the fact that all personell are carbon based life forms .

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    8 ай бұрын

    @@andrewtrip8617 1. Carbon footprint 2. Toxicity footprint = all toxic compounds/elements / waste.....

  • @mina_en_suiza
    @mina_en_suiza Жыл бұрын

    I had the book "Global 2000 - The report for the President", when I was young. The predictions for climate change were pretty accurate. Jimmy Carter was a far better US president (and person) than people gave him credit for. As with so many things: "Then came Reagan, and things turned far worse"

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    The first thing clown Ronald did was to take down the solar panels from the roof of the White House... Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex Mina ?

  • @mina_en_suiza

    @mina_en_suiza

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 Unfortunately, Reagan (and his British mate Thatcher) was one of the most consequential presidents, ever. The heritage of their neoliberal politics still lingers around. Also, the terrible approach "be chaste and don't be gay!" towards the AIDS epidemic killed so many people.

  • @DSAK55

    @DSAK55

    Жыл бұрын

    "The long term impact of atmospheric carbon dioxide on climate", 1979 irp.fas.org/agency/dod/jason/co2.pdf

  • @philipm3173

    @philipm3173

    Жыл бұрын

    Who woulda thunk a Hollywood maniac would do a nasty job controlling the most powerful empire in the world.

  • @DavidTh2

    @DavidTh2

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you are the first person I have ever heard say that. You must be a millenial.

  • @chinookvalley
    @chinookvalley7 ай бұрын

    In the 50's my dad owned an oil drilling company, making million$. He quit and started taking our family around the US to show us the destructions of man: drilling, clear cutting, soil pollution. He tried in vain to tell people in the petro industry that we had to change our ways or all would be lost. They didn't care, or change. Thanks for trying Dad.

  • @orion1816
    @orion18169 ай бұрын

    Oppenheimer: "I am become death, destroy of worlds" William Nierenberg: "Hold my beer"

  • @SimonClark

    @SimonClark

    9 ай бұрын

    As someone who watched Oppenheimer last night, this hits _way_ too hard

  • @cameronmclennan942
    @cameronmclennan942 Жыл бұрын

    So painful to watch the calamity playing out, but so thankful for your time, effort and skill to tell this important story, Simon. Thank you

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    The carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex Cameron?

  • @Matty18795

    @Matty18795

    Жыл бұрын

    A more channel that goes into more detail kzread.info/dash/bejne/q4Oc0q6PdsWnd84.html

  • @matthewsmith8249

    @matthewsmith8249

    9 ай бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 Are you a apid or full-time activist? You keep posting the same thing. How many GT of CO2 did the US military emit last year. How about China Baowu Steel Group?

  • @ValMartinIreland

    @ValMartinIreland

    9 ай бұрын

    Its modern hysterical religious bullshite. Ireland is just as cold now as it was in 1960

  • @user-df6mf9mb2l

    @user-df6mf9mb2l

    2 ай бұрын

    i watch it all unfold for 70 years and it hurts to see how backward and uncaring we have become. Even Greta is not a hero to many people it's so sad.

  • @OldShatterham
    @OldShatterham Жыл бұрын

    It is maddening to see how a small, but well-connected handful of bad actors could have such an influence on global policy...

  • @MrTooEarnestOnline

    @MrTooEarnestOnline

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s the nature of globalized capitalism. You will never have democracy unless you have economic democracy

  • @MrTooEarnestOnline

    @MrTooEarnestOnline

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewcheadle948 you do realize the ipcc has no power right… it just does research and makes suggestions. They don’t hold political power like billionaires with lobbying power or politicians. Stop being stupid

  • @sciencelab4225

    @sciencelab4225

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewcheadle948 how can you be this ignorant?

  • @MylesKillis

    @MylesKillis

    9 ай бұрын

    It would have been someone else if not them specifically

  • @chavitacanta008

    @chavitacanta008

    8 ай бұрын

    Not jusy IPCc but Al and Greta .

  • @HsinTsungChu
    @HsinTsungChu Жыл бұрын

    This is phenomenal! It's such a complicated and serious topic, yet it's presented in a very engaging way. Probably my favorite video among all videos I've watched so far in 2023.

  • @thomasdaniel100

    @thomasdaniel100

    8 ай бұрын

    Agreed. This channel is great overall.

  • @blupblup24
    @blupblup24 Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how deeply sad such a matter of fact video could make me. Thank you for your hard work Simon - most deserved like I've ever given.

  • @TheDane_BurnAllCopies
    @TheDane_BurnAllCopies Жыл бұрын

    Almost 50 years were we humans could have made the climate better. Thanks for yet another great video.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Arrhenius Equation, 1889. Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex?

  • @Matty18795

    @Matty18795

    Жыл бұрын

    A very good video that features the prophet michael mann kzread.info/dash/bejne/q4Oc0q6PdsWnd84.html

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    7 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change-And on any view it is religion because based on belief or passive unquestioning acceptance, is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; it is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as relatively gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @nayrtnartsipacify

    @nayrtnartsipacify

    6 ай бұрын

    50 years ago Klaus Schwab formed the World Economic Forum. The main focus of the world economic forum is climate change. Klaus is the main student of a liberation theology catholic archbishop Helder Camara. His other main student was pope francis. Liberation theology is marxist catholicism. Camara worked with Marcuse and Friere to push global communisim. All of this "climate crisis" cultisim is an extention of that.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nayrtnartsipacify Hmm, no doubt, religious fanatics ever were meddlesome trouble makers and stupefiers of the witles and degenerate. Nothing was ever unproved by religious ,mumbo jumbo and monkey business.

  • @johanneshansen852
    @johanneshansen852 Жыл бұрын

    Hearing an enthusiastic call for a "new cool idea: Carbon Tax" in 1988 gave me an aneurism when it seems nothing has really changed, the conversation 35 years later is still "we need to think about this cool new idea of a Carbon Tax no one has done before". We still don't have a real Carbon Tax anywhere in the world.

  • @jaykanta4326

    @jaykanta4326

    Жыл бұрын

    Australia had one for a little while and it worked.

  • @winstonsmasterplan

    @winstonsmasterplan

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it’s anti human, carbon tax is the equivalent to a surveillance state. Do you really want every aspect of your life scrutinised?

  • @overwrite_oversweet

    @overwrite_oversweet

    Жыл бұрын

    EU ETS is fine

  • @kastanie7445

    @kastanie7445

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@winstonsmasterplan what?

  • @winstonsmasterplan

    @winstonsmasterplan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kastanie7445 carbon tax isn’t achievable without technology facilitating the ‘accurate’ tracking of individual movement & consumption. We are being nudged towards a totalitarian system of mass surveillance under the banner of climate change.

  • @carstenweiland7896
    @carstenweiland7896 Жыл бұрын

    Seen a documentary from 1973 that pleaded for wind and solar energy because of sustainability and global warming, we really lost about 1/2 a century.

  • @corinnecd
    @corinnecd10 ай бұрын

    I was at the House of Reps. hearing in 1980, and still remember Al Gore asking questions to Roger Revelle. It made a huge impression on me. One of the last questions Revelle answered was related to forecasts/if we did nothing, where would sea levels be, and Revelle said something about the water would be lapping at the steps of the Capitol. There was, as I remember, a moment of dead silence. And the gavel came down and the hearing was adjourned. People filed out as if nothing had happened. The reason why this was so memorable was the apparent lack of reaction (or disbelief perhaps) on the part of many people there. Thank you for your video.

  • @SwagmanDude
    @SwagmanDude Жыл бұрын

    This is most definitely of the most informative youtube videos I've ever seen! Great job Simon!

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Too bad Big Brother Algorithm won't let him mention the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @kx7500

    @kx7500

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 ridiculous. we can mention that.

  • @Matty18795

    @Matty18795

    Жыл бұрын

    Here is a better more detailed channel/video kzread.info/dash/bejne/q4Oc0q6PdsWnd84.html

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Matty18795 By that you mean misinformation. Why is it always yanks promoting falsehoods and conspiracy theories? Herr Goebbels would be immensely proud of your work!

  • @KanalFrump
    @KanalFrump Жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU. This is an epic, necessary, concise and succint summary of how we got here. Amazing production.

  • @1donniekak

    @1donniekak

    Жыл бұрын

    Where is here? You make it sound like a bad place. Humanity has flourished as temperatures rise and fail as it falls.

  • @Youbetternowatchthis

    @Youbetternowatchthis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@1donniekak That is historically incorrect. Humnaity has flourished in a period called the Holocene wich was remarkably stable. Humanity is bringing this period to an end. We are currently in the process of the fourth mass extinction

  • @tcraigh1

    @tcraigh1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Youbetternowatchthisyou wish!

  • @kx7500

    @kx7500

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tcraigh1 yawn.

  • @mrbyzantine0528

    @mrbyzantine0528

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Youbetternowatchthis Actually it's the sixth!

  • @forestknowledge
    @forestknowledge6 ай бұрын

    Politician really said that our crops and products are only 3% from outdoors and won’t be affected by climate is absolutely crazy man

  • @OurEden
    @OurEden Жыл бұрын

    This is a fantastic summary, you've done such a good job to explain such a dense history well in a short documentary. Great work!

  • @artr0x93
    @artr0x93 Жыл бұрын

    love the bobby broccoli influence!

  • @TheIgnoramus
    @TheIgnoramus Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for compiling things together so we’ll. I still meet people who don’t believe it, and it’s heartbreaking. I’ve gotten to the point “It doesn’t matter what you believe, it will happen, and it will because of people who think just like you.”

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Most deniers are on the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex's payroll...

  • @kardoxfabricanus7590
    @kardoxfabricanus7590 Жыл бұрын

    It has multiple villains, billionaires whilst one of the two biggest ones are Rupert Murdoch and Henry Kissinger. The biggest Henchman being Ronald Reagan.

  • @cobhallagames6997
    @cobhallagames6997 Жыл бұрын

    It passes me off that Regan died in 2004 before he could see how much he messed everything up

  • @gbeachy2010

    @gbeachy2010

    Жыл бұрын

    And before we learned what we always suspected. The Iran hostages were deliberately kept captive until Reagan got elected.

  • @GuineaPigEveryday

    @GuineaPigEveryday

    Жыл бұрын

    And people still praise this dude becuz guess what ‘my pay and life standards is a tiny bit better therefore the government is amazing and all actions justified”. And jimmy carter is still condemned for just being in leadership during the Iranian siege

  • @travelinman790

    @travelinman790

    9 ай бұрын

    Reagan is probably the biggest piece of sh1t politician to ever be elected. People have know clue how bad he screwed this country and world up. May he rot in he11

  • @QT5656

    @QT5656

    9 ай бұрын

    Reagan lost the plot of what was going on long before he died.

  • @Sparticulous

    @Sparticulous

    7 ай бұрын

    He was an actor so he would not care

  • @CWM31P
    @CWM31P Жыл бұрын

    This and the previous video on the history of man-made climate change is some of the best summarised educational videos explaining what we know, what we knew, and why we are in the situation we are now. Truly impressed!

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Simon makes great videos. But still not a word about the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex... Big Brother (algorithms) is watching you tube...

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    9 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change-And on any view it is religion because based on belief or passive unquestioning acceptance, is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; it is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as relatively gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    8 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; It is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @Konsul135
    @Konsul135 Жыл бұрын

    What an absolutely brilliant piece of art, Simon! It was a hard watch, especially seeing how so few people can have such a huge and long-term impact on our lives.

  • @lacusrengoku5087
    @lacusrengoku5087 Жыл бұрын

    This is a brilliant title "The decade we LOST EARTH". accurate and sarcastic at the same time.

  • @simonnorris8076
    @simonnorris8076 Жыл бұрын

    There is so much in here that I knew nothing about. Thanks so much for making this Simon, genuinely eye opening

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    7 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change-And on any view it is religion because based on belief or passive unquestioning acceptance, is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; it is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as relatively gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @StrivetobeDust
    @StrivetobeDust Жыл бұрын

    This is a great summary of the political history that brought us to the mess we're facing, now. I've been watching this develop in the newspapers all my adult life. I would like to see a summary of how this campaign of orchestrated confusion continued beyond 1990 (it is still going on to this day).

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Too bad censorship won't allow to mention the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @morlath4767
    @morlath4767 Жыл бұрын

    The terrible thing is that it all (generally) comes down to the US' political philosophies breeding stubbornness to the point of everything else.

  • @afgor1088

    @afgor1088

    Жыл бұрын

    it's not a US philosophy. it's a capitalist philosophy, look around the world and you'll see similar stories

  • @krandeloy

    @krandeloy

    Жыл бұрын

    yar, that part at the end really got me. While in the US, being able to point at the handful of people from the US that deliberately stonewalled meaningful international policy and thus killing hope of giving our place up to our grandchildren and great grandchildren, the real roadblock as Reagan demonstrated was already baked the Red vs Blue two-party political system. Basically how the Bork Nomination Hearings sparked off a war of destructive, no compromise, war for a small faction within the GOP that culminated with that small faction gaining near total control of the RNC by the Reagan era. There has significant drop in bi-partisanship on Capital Hill since those events largely because of this Zero-Sum 'Us vs Them' mentality that has rooted itself firmly in the GOP/RNC policies. As Simon points out at the end of the video, there was already a strong divide between Red and Blue simply because Blue supported Climate Advocacy, therefore Red automatically took it on themselves to oppose it for no greater reason than to use it as a means to oppose Blue by proxy. Edit: If you read this far, I should mention that the Bork thing was Dem's doing the thing I just described the RNC still do, but at least I dont see the Dems continuing to uphold a grudge that throws the entire earth and all future generations under the bus after 40+ years after the fact.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Government is the entertainment division of the military industrial complex ~ Frank Zappa? Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @Praisethesunson

    @Praisethesunson

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol. It's one political philosophy. Entrench the wealth of the already wealthy even it costs the rest of humanity.

  • @NateB

    @NateB

    Жыл бұрын

    That stubbornness is what broke the USSR, and brought the idea of limited government and individual ownership of weapons to the world. It’s a double edged sword, but it’s slain some dragons in its time. Have a care for Chesterton’s Fence.

  • @briancrowther3272
    @briancrowther32728 ай бұрын

    Superb Simon, I taught EES (Earth & Enviornmental Science) and physics at high school (Pre uni in Australia) until retiring 5 years ago. Worked for Shell London 1981 and then EXXON/Mobil, Esso Australia 1982 to 1986 as a petroleum geologist, finding and producing heaps of oil and gas. EXXON never told us about what they knew, I am glad I didn't know or I would have resigned and done something else. So lucky to have moved across to teaching and spent the following 30 years honing this stuff. I wish we had your amazing renditions then, I would have used them. I have learned so much from you since retiring on this subject. Eg we always did the standard Greenhouse effect with the atrmosphere simply acting like a greenhouse, you showed that it is not like that, it is a result of energy being emiited to space at higher cooler levels in the atmosphere due to the increased CO2 below and by the steffan boltzman law (sorry re spelling here buffs) the energy trapped below is temp to the power 4. ie if it gets emiited at 2C with low CO2 but at 0 C at higher CO2 at a higher altitude then it 2 to the power 4 as much energy is trapped in the lower atmosphere. Or your one about carbon 13 reducing in the atmosphere over recent time due to fossil fuel burning, just a sibliome proof of it is humans making the CO2 that is causiing the climate change. So simple, so neat. Thankyou.

  • @ddieder
    @ddieder Жыл бұрын

    Simon, I really like your videos. Very strong writing, solid production quality (especially this one!) and you have a great, engaging voice. Please keep up the good work, I do hope you get more views going forward.

  • @SpinningSideKick9000
    @SpinningSideKick9000 Жыл бұрын

    What jumped out to me was how big a part the two ecoconomists had in this. Perhaps economists should also be required to study more anthropology and history, because their view of the world through economics does strike me as often being narrow.

  • @NaumRusomarov

    @NaumRusomarov

    Жыл бұрын

    their "arguments" were being made in bad faith; with the same success you could say that technological progress will fix climate change 200 years in the future and today there's absolutely nothing to worry about. it's poppycock, but many will buy it, which is the point of such arguments. other economists have been pointing out for decades that the world will be poorer if climate change continues unabated.

  • @OkunenSan

    @OkunenSan

    Жыл бұрын

    You make a great point!

  • @07Flash11MRC

    @07Flash11MRC

    10 ай бұрын

    Economists should never be involved in any of these kinds of decisions, because profits over people is their highest believe and any change to the status quo is more expensive than just doing nothing.

  • @SpinningSideKick9000

    @SpinningSideKick9000

    10 ай бұрын

    @@07Flash11MRC I don't think that's always true. For example, giving homeless people a house for free is theorized to be more cost effective than jailing and hospitalizing them. I just think our current economic theory mostly worships short term profit, as you mentioned.

  • @07Flash11MRC

    @07Flash11MRC

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SpinningSideKick9000 It's not "theorized", it's been proven already which is why smart countries like Finnland do just that. You just proved my point. The only reason for economists to do things (meaning changing the status quo) is when it's economically useful for them, not out of the kindness of their heart or them caring for other people. And even then, when you consider countries like the US they don't even do the right thing when it is economically sound.

  • @jcmoreutube
    @jcmoreutube9 ай бұрын

    Phenomenal recap of the issue. Please Simon, create/share a list of references you used. Thank you for all the work you put on to make this.

  • @clivepierce1816
    @clivepierce1816 Жыл бұрын

    It ought not to come as too much of a surprise that economists of the ‘80s dismissed climate change. After all, their economic models treated the natural world as an externality. Despite the Stern report and subsequent economic analyses concluding otherwise, our leaders continue to worship at the alter of neoliberalism and, contrary to all the evidence, believe that technology will save the day. I’m reminded of the words of C. P. Snow in his 1959 Rede Lecture on the Two Cultures - “A good many times I have been present at gatherings of people who, by the standards of the traditional culture, are thought highly educated and who have with considerable gusto been expressing their incredulity at the illiteracy of scientists. Once or twice I have been provoked and have asked the company how many of them could describe the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The response was cold: it was also negative. Yet I was asking something which is about the scientific equivalent of: 'Have you read a work of Shakespeare's?'”

  • @1urie1
    @1urie1 Жыл бұрын

    Sununu and all the free market absolutists must really hate their grandkids, who will bear all the brunt of what they messed up.

  • @DSAK55

    @DSAK55

    Жыл бұрын

    the wealthy will always be better of the masses

  • @NateB

    @NateB

    Жыл бұрын

    Leaded gasoline!

  • @sapientisessevolo4364
    @sapientisessevolo4364 Жыл бұрын

    An informative but angering video. To know that we could've definitely avoided 1.5C without extreme measures Keep up the great work!

  • @KanalFrump

    @KanalFrump

    Жыл бұрын

    but just think if we had acted back then, and taken the problem seriously as adults with some degree of responsibility and foresight, instead of children raiding the proverbial candy store, we'd have been out the past many decades of excess. our computers would be a little slower and probably a bit more expensive. we might have fewer cars, and have to hold on to them longer. the landfills would be without so many layers of yearly replaced ifones. instead of rampant suburbanism with 3 trucks in every driveway, we'd have focused on living more efficiently, with less waste, which might have forced us to move closer together and make our cities nicer and more livable, with dense public transportation networks instead of five layered cloverleaf junctions and stripmalls from coast to coast. there'd probably also be fewer of us. And we'd live leaner, healthier, longer lives. things would be less rushed. probably jet travel would be very much diminished, along with all wasteful high-emission and nonessential frivolties for which sustainable alternatives exist. maybe we'd take it slow and cross the oceans on ships again. take 3-4 days to go from a port in Europe to NYC for example. And so what?

  • @le13579

    @le13579

    10 ай бұрын

    What's the uncertainty on your 1.5 degrees over 100years global average? +/- 0.1 C? 0.25 C?

  • @aimmoth13
    @aimmoth139 ай бұрын

    Really good graphics moving back and fourth on a timeline to understand when stuff happened and with great pictures to characterize it 👏👏

  • @KalebPeters99
    @KalebPeters99 Жыл бұрын

    Simon, this new format inspired by Bobby is just brilliant. Puts it all into perspective so nicely. Brilliant work 🙏

  • @jjohn1234
    @jjohn1234 Жыл бұрын

    I love that the map of the netherlands already assumes we will claim all of the inland waters like the ijselmeer and the waters in zeeland. And can't believe that we knew about global warming and still are unable to reach effective political action.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    8 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; It is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind. You wil get bored with your religion toy soonenough or another one will become fashionable and off after that, you and the rest of the flock will go.

  • @samanjj
    @samanjj Жыл бұрын

    Loved the way you explained this - the use of timeline graphics really helped tell the story

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    We're still missing the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @samanjj

    @samanjj

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 i don’t think that really enters into it. If the USSR and USA could agree on the whole in the ozone layer, i don’t see how the MIC impacts this at all.

  • @macosx10.7lion4

    @macosx10.7lion4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 It needs to be decarbonised.

  • @qbas81
    @qbas81 Жыл бұрын

    This is so well made and informative video! I thought I knew topic pretty well but still learned few new facts. Thanks Simon!

  • @scottekoontz
    @scottekoontz Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the most comprehensive and brilliant presentations on this topic I have seen. This has become one of my bookmarks, and I will be reviewing often. Thank you.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    All you need to have a complete picture now is the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @evildude951
    @evildude951 Жыл бұрын

    Well this video title sounds entirely too depressing for a Friday morning, think I'll come back to it later haha

  • @tristanridley1601

    @tristanridley1601

    Жыл бұрын

    We already know the ending, so not too depressing.

  • @AJarOfYams

    @AJarOfYams

    Жыл бұрын

    I know the feeling. But do make a reminder for yourself to come back

  • @AlexandruNicolin
    @AlexandruNicolin Жыл бұрын

    It's very hard to say in hindsight whether the technology would have been available. Had there been serious investment from back then in research fir solar panels, wind turbines and innovative nuclear technologies, we could have leapfrogged 10-15 years ahead compared to where we are today. Also a contributing factor were the relatively low oil prices in the mid 1980s to mid 2000s, so there was no economic incentive to move away from oil.

  • @Luemm3l

    @Luemm3l

    Жыл бұрын

    uhm, no, i disagree. one example of germany, my native country: during the 2000s we were world leaders in solar panel production actually. then because of some political givings, the industry faltered, companies went to asia and today we buy from china. currently, our current infrastructure minister is lobbying against a ban on combustion engines with other eu countries who rely on their car manufacturing industry. the technology has been in drawers or could have been today where we wanted it to be if people werent assholes and old industries would be willing to change instead of clinging to their power. good for them, bad for us all. other technologies like fusion or gas or hydrogen may be good for particular industries or niches, but in a global context, reneweables are where its at. unfortunately, europe will not decide that, but rather countries like china and india (and the us, south america and russia by extension, but mainly the big global players).

  • @NaumRusomarov

    @NaumRusomarov

    Жыл бұрын

    a huge part of the greenhouse gases were released in the last 20-30 years. had they put in the effort, money and research during the 70s and 80s into consciously moving away from fossil fuels we'd be in a far better condition today. even back then there were technologies that were clearly better than burning coal and fossil gas.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Anyone remember the oil fields on fire in Koweït? Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex anybody? Thank you CIA / Pentagon for Northstream wrecking.

  • @thegreataynrand7210

    @thegreataynrand7210

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Luemm3l You must be smoking crack. Europe is in an energy crisis exactly because there out their faith in unreliable solar and wind. Mass poverty and deindustrialization will happen if the world goes down the path of Europe.

  • @russellharrell2747

    @russellharrell2747

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah we definitely had the technologies to begin making policies with teeth back in the 80s. And with proper funding those technologies would have only become more efficient, as well as refining newer technologies. Expanding nuclear to mitigate or even halt coal produced electricity is a no brainer. Wind and solar are still vastly underused (HOAs even limit private citizens from effectively using solar on their own homes). There was much we can have done back then, and far more that we can do now. But we won’t. Not until something true my disastrous happens, which will probably be in about a decade or so, and by then it’ll be a bit late in the game.

  • @buggerall
    @buggerall11 ай бұрын

    The Marshall Institute. 15 years ago I found out about them. I then also found out how successful their campaign of confusion was. Thanks for this great video.

  • @AnarchoCatBoyEthan
    @AnarchoCatBoyEthan9 ай бұрын

    fantastic videos, i'm happy i found your channel. these two climate videos have been incredible, lots of interesting stuff.

  • @TheYoutubeUser69
    @TheYoutubeUser69 Жыл бұрын

    i legit saw the introp and thought that looks like one of bobbys vids! and then i saw the remark. glad you two legends work together!

  • @ThePrimevalVoid
    @ThePrimevalVoid Жыл бұрын

    Love the non-linear callout

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi10 ай бұрын

    Excellent video, Simon! Many thanks for this enlightening information. 😊

  • @FUFriendsUnited
    @FUFriendsUnited Жыл бұрын

    "Non-linear" Love the inspiration from BobbyBroccoli. I never thought we'd see the John Bois editing style become so mainstream. Fantastic video as always. Fits your content very well.

  • @wrathofgrothendieck

    @wrathofgrothendieck

    Жыл бұрын

    Non-Euclidian

  • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
    @PremierCCGuyMMXVI Жыл бұрын

    The video definitely highlights science vs politics and business Scientists warn us about how humans are turning Earth into a hot house not seen in millions of years and politicians and businessman try to push doubt and misinformation to protect corporate profits.

  • @alwynwatson6119

    @alwynwatson6119

    Жыл бұрын

    It was not so much that they were protecting corporate profits as they had an Anti-science, anti-sustainability agenda. Research and development of technologies that have a lot of potential that are currently in their infancy is a profitable thing to do.

  • @Chorismos

    @Chorismos

    9 ай бұрын

    Nirenberg was a Scientist aswell.

  • @lordofthepies
    @lordofthepies Жыл бұрын

    Yes! I love the continued experiment with the Bobby broccoli style of editing, even if it's only once in a while

  • @alwynwatson6119

    @alwynwatson6119

    Жыл бұрын

    Today photovoltaics of the cheapest form of energy closely followed by wind. Just imagine how much better they would be if countries with a well educated population took research and development of these technologies seriously 50 years ago.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alwynwatson6119 there is no "clean" energy. There is greed, hence corruption... Btw, the carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @QuickThink688
    @QuickThink6889 ай бұрын

    Mister Simon Clark, what a brilliant multimedia presentation that can be paused and studied with a timeline, pictures, quotes, and oratory...truly didactic! Thank you for your continued commitment to educating as far reaching an audience as possible.🙏 Thumbs up!

  • @sohrobby
    @sohrobby8 ай бұрын

    This was very interesting to watch and well supported, thanks for putting it together.

  • @akaviral5476
    @akaviral5476 Жыл бұрын

    Bobby Broccoli is an objectively great name by the way

  • @thetj8243
    @thetj8243 Жыл бұрын

    I've already seen the video on nebula and just wanted to say thank you for it!

  • @lowstrife
    @lowstrife Жыл бұрын

    I'm so happy Bobby Broccoli is getting a light shon on him. His latest steal an element video went mega viral - not surprised it came across your radar too. I instantly recognized the 3d style in your video here. Well done sir, well done.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    We should also shine a light on the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @forzaacmilan36

    @forzaacmilan36

    2 ай бұрын

    Ehmm… These style of videos are actually from Jon Bois. But that guy does sports(you should just check his videos). Bobby broccoli took that style to science.

  • @lowstrife

    @lowstrife

    2 ай бұрын

    @@forzaacmilan36 Offffff course that's right, I saw one of those videos yonks ago and I've been trying to find the source guy who came up with the concept. You're 100% right

  • @charliehubbard3257
    @charliehubbard3257 Жыл бұрын

    And the irony of his skiing photo behind Sununu and the fact HE's a major reason global warming wasn't tackled when the US needed to act. That's likely the closest thing to an actual villain incarnate you'll encounter.

  • @Argosh
    @Argosh Жыл бұрын

    We didn't lose earth. We lost our housing permit for earth. Earth is gonna be fine. We're not.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    Жыл бұрын

    "We" being *You* and which identifiable immediate interlocutor that you are addressing?

  • @Argosh

    @Argosh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vhawk1951kl most definitely homo sapiens, but considering that reply I'm not sure if I want to include you in that. Not particularly... sapient...

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Argosh Clearly that is your best and only shot which explains much, particularly how religion makes fools of men(human beings)

  • @Argosh

    @Argosh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vhawk1951kl it's funny, because you're the religidiot...

  • @jaykanta4326

    @jaykanta4326

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vhawk1951kl Why are you such a worthless troll?

  • @xxdr34m5xx_4
    @xxdr34m5xx_4 Жыл бұрын

    Great video 🙏🏼 geoscientist here, I'm currently studying ice core records throughout the Holocene for a homework. Do you have an explanation why the temperature signal (d18O Stack) nearly always changes before the CO2 signal ? Doesn't that somehow question the causality between CO2 and temperature? This doesn't change our responsibility for modern climate change of course.

  • @SimonClark

    @SimonClark

    Жыл бұрын

    Very good question, and the answer is predictably a little more complex than a simple relationship. Skeptical Science has an excellent article on the subject (great resource for questions like this) skepticalscience.com/co2-lags-temperature.htm

  • @xxdr34m5xx_4

    @xxdr34m5xx_4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SimonClark awesome, thanks a lot 🙏🏼

  • @xxdr34m5xx_4

    @xxdr34m5xx_4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SimonClark so basically: the initial temperature signal comes from orbital parameter changes, triggers a positive feedback with CO2 and therefore continues to warm/cool until the next orbital parameter changes. This both explains the CO2 effecting atmospheric temperature (greenhouse) and the CO2 signal lagging behind the temperature change, right ? 😁

  • @SimonClark

    @SimonClark

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@xxdr34m5xx_4 bang on, yes

  • @timcartwright4679

    @timcartwright4679

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SimonClark Only problem is that CO2 rise lags Temp rise by several centuries. Which is problematic for AGW theory....

  • @ianseaweed
    @ianseaweed Жыл бұрын

    Excellent production, I’ve not seen such a comprehensive timeline of the recent scientific / political friction over global warming.

  • @markrobinowitz8473
    @markrobinowitz8473 Жыл бұрын

    "We have met the enemy and they is us." - Pogo. The American Way of Life (AWOL) is not sustainable. We blew it when we ignored Carter's (meek) warnings.

  • @zellipa

    @zellipa

    Жыл бұрын

    i call what he was doing climate whispering. i wasn't able to vote yet, but i really appreciated his energy talks. raygun's election totally traumatized me.

  • @af8828
    @af8828 Жыл бұрын

    Babe wake up, it's time to watch capitalogenic climate change lore, the prologue to the largest mass extinction since the end-Permian :) (Seriously though, thank you for this, Simon).

  • @vascomanteigas9433

    @vascomanteigas9433

    3 ай бұрын

    You need 5000 to 10000 ppm or even 30000 ppm (the Higherst estimative of carbon dioxide on Permian) to reach such disaster. The global temperatures was around 32°C.

  • @af8828

    @af8828

    3 ай бұрын

    @@vascomanteigas9433 you're not considering how much faster todays mass extinction is occurring than the end permian.

  • Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Keep up with the awesome work Simon 👏👏👏

  • @UK75roger
    @UK75roger Жыл бұрын

    This is an excellent documentary. I look forward to, and hope to see, a similar study of the following 30 years!

  • @claudeliechti4571
    @claudeliechti45719 ай бұрын

    Thanks Simon! I will share this masterpiece with my students :)

  • @bgebbq314
    @bgebbq314 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. It's sad how the "divide and conquer" strategy worked then and, alas, continues to work.

  • @oliverwilson11
    @oliverwilson11 Жыл бұрын

    12:40 The idea that global agricultural productivity could decline by a third and it basically wouldn't make a difference seems like the kind of thing only an economist could believe

  • @___.51

    @___.51

    Жыл бұрын

    GDP has no bearing on regular people but it represents how much money the owning class is making so that's why it's able to go up even as the US de-industrializes. Non productive industries like finance and services inflate the GDP despite producing little to nothing for the average person.

  • @andrewtrip8617

    @andrewtrip8617

    9 ай бұрын

    When is the decline supposed to happen or is it still a prediction . We do know that co2 increase has boosted it by 6 %.

  • @oliverwilson11

    @oliverwilson11

    9 ай бұрын

    @@andrewtrip8617 Go bother somebody else, I don't care what evidence you think you have. Join the IPCC if you're such an expert

  • @andrewtrip8617

    @andrewtrip8617

    8 ай бұрын

    @@oliverwilson11 it's nasa data .born out by agricultural production records .You can take it or leave it Depending on how much of an alarmist you are .

  • @redrockcrf4663
    @redrockcrf4663 Жыл бұрын

    Well there's been several "lost" years. But by the time leading up to the Kyoto protocol, lots of officials were fully aware of what was going to happen, that's the period where we went fully off course. So the mid-90's to 2005: certainly if it had been taken seriously and been worked on steadily since then, we would be much further along, and have more time going forward till tipping points are reached.

  • @NateB

    @NateB

    Жыл бұрын

    It doesn’t help that so many of the loudest environmentalists seem to think the only solutions are totalitarian communism.

  • @sebdiaz1852
    @sebdiaz1852 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing work. Good to put name and faces to the responsables for not taking action back in the 70s and 80s. Human history will remember this people and the lack of accountability of the developed nations, fosil fuel industry and the US government.

  • @simonabunker
    @simonabunker Жыл бұрын

    Please do continue this series! The research and animation really are outstanding!

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    Hopefully the algorithm will allow mentioning the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex... Nah. Won't happen.

  • @PeterReidUK
    @PeterReidUK Жыл бұрын

    God, Nierenberg and Sununu really screwed us and the planet didn't they

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    The carbon /toxicity boot print of the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex Peter?

  • @DSAK55

    @DSAK55

    Жыл бұрын

    They were just typical GOP pricks. Even if they didn't exist, once Ronnie Raygun was sElected, the only question was how fast the shit was going to hit the fan.

  • @xWood4000

    @xWood4000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lorenzoblum868 Please stop spamming. The military industrial complex is a large issue, but climate change is related to all industries, not only the military one.

  • @Moses_VII

    @Moses_VII

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't blaspheme.

  • @lyrimetacurl0

    @lyrimetacurl0

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@Moses_VII There's no such thing as God.

  • @hurrdurrmurrgurr
    @hurrdurrmurrgurr Жыл бұрын

    All these terrible results were funded by the oil industry. I'd say the fight was lost centuries earlier with the US government allowing corrupt oligarchs to make rail transportation exorbitantly expensive while inventors were designing the first automobiles which gave the citizenry their alternative and ultimately enabled massive urban sprawl and the need for the automobile to travel in the US. The oil industry would still exist for synthetic goods manufacturing but be nowhere near as powerful or influential if transportation didn't require them.

  • @Alcatrazrezz
    @Alcatrazrezz8 ай бұрын

    These two videos have been super informative. Thank you, sir.

  • @furionese
    @furionese Жыл бұрын

    I just watched this video on Nebula and came here specifically to say bravo. Strangely I got around 40 science channels I subscribed to but your videos never came across on my feed. Hmmm. Anyway I subbed here too.

  • @andrewbenbow9257
    @andrewbenbow9257 Жыл бұрын

    The shark was not the villain, just a natural causality, the mayor did nothing to prevent the damage... he is the villain.

  • @FlintMcroy
    @FlintMcroy Жыл бұрын

    This kinda shit makes my blood boil. Good job making this story accessible for people

  • @petrskupa6292
    @petrskupa6292 Жыл бұрын

    William A. Nierenberg - was the crowned villain. ... originator of it all.. Wilingly, knowing what he did missrepresent If I understood it the Sonanu guy kinda believed in what he was doing - and partly because of that Nierenberg ways of present facts

  • @Waawaaweewaa_
    @Waawaaweewaa_ Жыл бұрын

    I never imagined I would see such quality educational content from a channel I found when looking for student vlogs to motivate my myself in my own studies a decade ago. This is incredible Simon, you were an inspiration to me then and you still are now.

  • @lorenzoblum868

    @lorenzoblum868

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair, we're missing the elephant in the room aka the military industrial complex...

  • @markwilliams2620

    @markwilliams2620

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@lorenzoblum868 And if you post that another 20 times, it might make sense.

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    7 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change-And on any view it is religion because based on belief or passive unquestioning acceptance, is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; it is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as relatively gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @darrenparis8314
    @darrenparis8314 Жыл бұрын

    Come on algorithm, boost this magnificent piece of work! We've got the BobbyBroccoli format! It's got to go big now!

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock001 Жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure with hindsight we can suggest anyone believed capitalism was "the best way to improve people's lives", it was just the best way for corporations to make the most money at the expense of people's wellbeing.

  • @kirstenspencer3630
    @kirstenspencer3630 Жыл бұрын

    Shell oil company came out with video in the early 1990's explaining the damage CO2 run amok will do to the climate. It can be found on the internet. By the way I worked for shell oil co doing QC for fifteen years. Sorry, I didn't know in1979 when I started amount the damage of CO2.

  • @JoeMmt347

    @JoeMmt347

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I worked for Chevron and we watched videos and had to pass a little test on Climate Change. The Refinery Manager gave his yearly business meeting with all of us. He said there was a “large human component to Climate Change “ . It fell on deaf ears. Sadly.

  • @kirstenspencer3630

    @kirstenspencer3630

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JoeMmt347 , sadly MY EARS were deaf at my own choice. I was more worried that I wouldn't get my favorite doughnut. I thought " oh we will cross that bridge when we get to it sadly not realizing wE were ALREADY WELL ONTO THE BRIDGE. Many Christians belive we can trash the planet cause jesus will come back and rapture them leaving the wrecked earth to the sinners. Most have no interest in simple science actually claiming science is the work of the devil. So twenty percent of the adult population simply refuse to even listen. We are in dire straits.

  • @sonnywhitelaw5559
    @sonnywhitelaw5559 Жыл бұрын

    Really well done. Have embedded the video in our climate change New Zealand website under 'Who knew what, when'

  • @gregeoryl
    @gregeoryl Жыл бұрын

    I got my degree in electronic engineering technology, not meteorology, but I had a lot of credit hours studying the propagation of EM waves through different media. The classroom and lab work showed exactly how global warming wa described decades before I heard of global warming. The science is not new, and is proven, we just didn't know the consequences and extent.

  • @le13579

    @le13579

    10 ай бұрын

    You can't forecast the behaviour of a chaotic, non linear system 100 years into the future. You would have done a little bit of fluid dynamics in your early years?

  • @vhawk1951kl

    @vhawk1951kl

    7 ай бұрын

    The entire religion of global warming or climate change-And on any view it is religion because based on belief or passive unquestioning acceptance, is based upon one fundamental misapprehension which, if you remove it, causes the entire theory or religion to collapse, and the fundamental misapprehension is that there either is or can be, any such thing as a Global temperature. It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth. A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate. Planet Earth doesn’t have ‘a temperature’, one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it’s starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets ‘turned off’; and just as it’s starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets ‘turned on’. The ‘temperature of Earth’ is therefore as much of a contrived statistic as the GDP of a country. (If the Earth was in equilibrium, that is, if it absorbed and re-emitted the Sun’s radiation perfectly, as a ‘blackbody’, then its rotation would be irrelevant, and the temperature would be a constant 6 ⁰C. Mocking up the effects of Earth’s albedo brings the ‘blackbody’ temperature down to -18 ⁰C, and including greenhouse warming brings it back up to around 15 ⁰C.) ‘The climate’ is difficult to define: is it a trend over one decade, century, or millennium? For what sized region is it defined ? Weather is very variable - how can we go from weather to climate? Furthermore, climate change on human timescales is a very small effect, and the empirical data needed for climate models have large ‘error’ bars. If you cannot define what is changing, you cannot say it is changing; it is essential to understand that no man apprehend or experience the entire plant -the whole-thing all-at-once. You cannot even sense apprehend experience yourself - he-whole-thing, all-at-once, so how could you possibly experience something as relatively gigantic as the planet on which you live, other than piecemeal and seriatim - little bit after little bit. If you remove the fallacy that there either is or can be, any such thing as a “Global Temperature” , the entire edifice of climate change and/or global warming, collapses, because it is contingent on the idea that there can be , or is, a “ Global Temperature, which is a thermodynamic and mathematical impossibility. While it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it is meaningless to talk about a global temperature for Earth. The Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average 'global exchange rate'. If temperature decreases at one point and it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before, but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a different climate. If, for example, it is 10 degrees at one point and 40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate, because in the former case one would have pressure differences and strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.

  • @Inaf1987
    @Inaf1987 Жыл бұрын

    Simon, could you please talk about ethanol subsidies, it's making things worse, we lose a huge chunk of our potential carbon sink because of this policy for very little output for the energy we put in.

  • @NateB

    @NateB

    Жыл бұрын

    Yet more idiocy brought to us by credulous, low information environmentalists.

  • @axeld53
    @axeld53 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome stuff as always! But man, "to go nonlinear" is such a good phrase! I heard it once before though I don't remember where. Now I'll make I use it more often.

  • @cpasr8065

    @cpasr8065

    Жыл бұрын

    The other reply is a scam.

  • @axeld53

    @axeld53

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cpasr8065 I can tell, but thank you for pointing it out. Some may not be able to recognize it as a scam. I will report it.

  • @Yanquetino
    @Yanquetino5 ай бұрын

    A very informative, albeit tragic, review of how the scientific reality of climate change was communicated and yet… undermined for power and greed. I only wish you had included a mention of Carl Sagan's testimony before congress, the early research by Exxon's own scientists, how GM itself became cognizant enough of the danger to develop the EV1 electric car, and… how Reagan removed Carter's solar panels on the White House!

  • @nami1540
    @nami1540 Жыл бұрын

    This is what my mom ment with, that there was a time in her youth, where everything seemed to move into the right direction. The fall of the soviet union, the alleged victory of democracy and humand rights, the alliviation of acid rain and the ozone problem and the open discourse on climate change. Than came Bush, 911, ...

  • @SahnigReingeloetet

    @SahnigReingeloetet

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah… we had a good run. But we‘ve lost. Let‘s hope civilization survives.

  • @pjk9225
    @pjk9225 Жыл бұрын

    As a born and raised cape codder, you’ve committed one of the cardinal sins: it’s ON cape cod, not IN cape cod! The folks at WHOI are fantastic, loved going there in field trips

  • @climate42
    @climate42 Жыл бұрын

    Some years ago I read a book that told a similar narrative that identified some of the same villains. The exposition is just as good.

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