Anonymous
7/3/2025, 1:28:22 AM
No.81694579
>>81694087
No it isn't you silly fuckwit. It's simple thermodynamics, energy in vs energy out. The planet is currently gaining 750 trillion joules of energy per second more than it's losing. That's 23,652 quintillion joules per year, 36 times the total annual energy consumption of humanity. Just 20 years ago, the planet was gaining 250 trillion joules, a tripling over two decades. And it keeps increasing every year. The air temp is the end result, but the air only holds a little bit of this energy, 90% of it goes into the oceans. This is what's melting the ice caps, which is keeping the oceans cool enough to keep storing this energy. Once the ice caps melt completely and the system balances, the oceans will rapidly heat, and due to evaporation the energy will enter the atmosphere.
It is utterly unprecedented in the history of the earth and nothing alive today has adapted, nor has the time to adapt, to the climate of the very near future.
No it isn't you silly fuckwit. It's simple thermodynamics, energy in vs energy out. The planet is currently gaining 750 trillion joules of energy per second more than it's losing. That's 23,652 quintillion joules per year, 36 times the total annual energy consumption of humanity. Just 20 years ago, the planet was gaining 250 trillion joules, a tripling over two decades. And it keeps increasing every year. The air temp is the end result, but the air only holds a little bit of this energy, 90% of it goes into the oceans. This is what's melting the ice caps, which is keeping the oceans cool enough to keep storing this energy. Once the ice caps melt completely and the system balances, the oceans will rapidly heat, and due to evaporation the energy will enter the atmosphere.
It is utterly unprecedented in the history of the earth and nothing alive today has adapted, nor has the time to adapt, to the climate of the very near future.