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The carbon cycle is key to understanding climate change | The Economist

Until a few hundred years ago there was a perfect balance of carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere. Human activity has disrupted that balance. What can be done to restore it?



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24 comments

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  1. ce sil

    is incredible how the system lead directly to the mass to do whatever the system wants

  2. G Sterling

    The lemmings eat this stuff up.  You can save the world by eating plant burgers.  You can solve racism by tearing down old statues and kneeling during a National Anthem.

    1. Dundoril

      Yes it's part of it. I

  3. Khalid Pirzada

    Very comprehensive coverage.
    Thank you..

  4. Herza I. M.

    It's impossible to reserve our nature while we still use fossil fuels, until we switch to clean energy. Why don't we just do that now? Because that's not cheap. It's gonna collapse entire oil industry, and the cost of building the infrastructure is magnificent. So, we're not gonna do that until the emergence of human extinction caused by the backlashing natural disaster we'll bring upon ourselves, at that time it'll be too late

  5. B L

    "key to reversing the damage…" Yeah, we can't reverse it, at least not in human lifetimes. It will take centuries. The best we can do is slow down the warming. This is why people who understand this stuff are freaking out.

    1. Reggie Cyde

      What damage?

  6. Kor Wai Chong

    the us president donald dumb had said before there is no climate change, thats why he pulled usa out of the climate change treaty. so you guys stop worrying about climate change.

  7. Matt Biondic

    What a beard!!

  8. jonneyboy211

    I wonder what cost of one of those negative carbon facilities

  9. Erik Medina

    Can someone explain to me why the Earth can't easily make up for the human emissions by absorbing more CO2? I read that Earth is a natural carbon sink, so why shouldn't it be able to absorb the extra amount by, in a sense, feeling that things are out of balance and adjusting for it?
    By the way, I'm not a climate denier; just want to understand better.

  10. siddharth Tripathi

    Why you didn't mention GHG emissions by cattle rearing industry which is way more than other sources of emission. This tacit ignorance of THE REAL FACTOR speaks of your ethics and research

  11. Thinker

    Why there is an underlying tone of hatred to human development and progress. When they put the first clip of the industrial revolution, they put that scary sound effect along with it. Why I feel like there is an ungrateful sentiment in this whole video. I mean, it is complicated. Yes, climate change is happening, and yes humans have increased the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, but at least we stopped dying at the age of 4! Also, we've only been aware of our impact on the climate since the 1960s. That's not a long time ago, and we aren't doing very bad for people who just woke up to the problem. The world is not going to end from climate change, and we will be okay, as is the earth and the ecosystems will be. Technological development, and reduced poverty will be the most important aspects when it comes to battling climate change. Not stopping fossil fuels. Fossil fuels will be abandoned if renewables are more attractive. Therefore we need to make renewables more attractive and not just demand that fossil fuels be banned, and demonize humans and human development. Read Bjørn Lomborg if you want to know more about what I'm talking about.

    1. Trade Prosper

      Being an engineer, I love tech but there are consequences. Lomborg is a tech utopian. Increased development will not fix climate change. Our greenhouse gas emissions go up every year so we have effectively done nothing substantial. No one will pay to sequester CO2 in any meaningful amount (billions of tons every year). The water is coming so don't buy any property below 3 meters. Our current path will lead to a sea level rise of 70 meters (230 feet) although it will take several hundred years to complete. No sure our current civilization will survive that.

    2. Thinker

      @Trade Prosper Also being an Engineer I seriously disagree with that. Technological development is powerful if we invest enough in R&D instead of wasting huge amounts of money to not solve the problem. Even if I agree with you that Lomborg is a tech utopian, he still makes a strong argument for the lack of effectiveness of the proposed climate change solutions such as the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement. Most of the emission reductions so far have been the result of technology, not policy.
      I'm not even gonna go into the 70 meters sea level rise and other apocalyptic scenarios, which are the result of lacking and inaccurate models that ignore a lot of complex and interacting variables.

  12. Harry Da Platypus

    Just…wow. Didn't think an "economist" would care about climate change tho

  13. It's the Economy,

    5:29 I did not know that the field of science known as Geology had any in situ carbon absorption qualities.

  14. Alex Drozan

    When they call you for an interview and you didnt get the time to finish shaving your beard.

  15. Petya

    A bit disappointed that animal agriculture wasn't even mentioned

  16. Reggie Cyde

    The climate change agenda is much like the coronavirus. The empirical experience is divergent of the data we are being provided. In fact, both agendas are entirely asserted by data alone, empirical evidence is bereft. Thus, both require a leap of faith. Much like religions….

  17. Sweet Jesus Emmanuel

    Hmm

  18. Harsh Gupta

    0:10 sun moon is also same

  19. 徐瑞君

    sofa

  20. B S

    The current generation in power needs to move away or to be removed in order for our world to advance.

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