I don't like to post a lot of video's here, but I thought this one was very interesting (or provocative, depending on your outlook).
Its by 'Just have a think', who is overall quite reasonable about this stuff IMO.
The paper being discussed is here.
Basically, it says that the accounting scheme developed by the IPCC 30 years ago, and which has guided the (slow) policy changes for mitigating climate impacts is pretty skewed based on new data, and proposes that all greenhouse gases and particulates be scored instead using their forcing in W/m^2 in warming.
It also says that current human impacts on global energy balance are about 3W/m^2, or over 1 million gigawatts.
This is a more intuitive and sexy way of describing the problem relative to 'gigatonnes CO2eq' and 'Global Warming potential'.
there are two major points,
1. IPCC discounts the particulates (and particulate forming gases) from fossil emissions, and thus overstates fossil emission's fractional impact by a factor of more than 2!
2. The IPCC also made a bookkeeping choice with land use and biomass that undercounts its impacts by a similar amount.
After they crunch all the numbers (summarized starting about minute 11 in the video), they say that on a W/m^2 basis, all fossils emissions are responsible for about 20% of global warming, versus the IPCC estimate of >50%. And that agriculture is responsible for >50%, versus the famous IPCC that put it more like 25-30%. And most of that 'agriculture' score is due to one thing: livestock, or 'animal ag'. This makes sense to me since we can see human climate effects through history (in ice cores) when a continental region got put under the plow, or regrew forest (after the Black Death).
The IPCC (and similar vintage climate activists like Gore and Gates) are openly dismissive of any attempts to mitigate livestock emissions for climate goals... they admit that it is important, but that it should be ignored 'tactically' as it is politically untenable. So there will likely be a battle royale between those activists who want to follow the science (like scientists and maybe younger people) and those who have other priorities or ideas.
I can't resist a video that takes a dig at Bill.
A side note (not discussed in the video) is that recent efforts to reduce N2O and particulates (since 1990 especially) could have greatly accelerated recent warming. Similar to the idea that reducing sulfur in shipping fuel had a recent, rapid warming effect too.
Change is coming, and fighting climate change is about to look a lot different than it did 10 years ago. On the bright side, it might be more effective too.
At least I hope so! 🤞
Its by 'Just have a think', who is overall quite reasonable about this stuff IMO.
The paper being discussed is here.
Basically, it says that the accounting scheme developed by the IPCC 30 years ago, and which has guided the (slow) policy changes for mitigating climate impacts is pretty skewed based on new data, and proposes that all greenhouse gases and particulates be scored instead using their forcing in W/m^2 in warming.
It also says that current human impacts on global energy balance are about 3W/m^2, or over 1 million gigawatts.

This is a more intuitive and sexy way of describing the problem relative to 'gigatonnes CO2eq' and 'Global Warming potential'.
there are two major points,
1. IPCC discounts the particulates (and particulate forming gases) from fossil emissions, and thus overstates fossil emission's fractional impact by a factor of more than 2!
2. The IPCC also made a bookkeeping choice with land use and biomass that undercounts its impacts by a similar amount.
After they crunch all the numbers (summarized starting about minute 11 in the video), they say that on a W/m^2 basis, all fossils emissions are responsible for about 20% of global warming, versus the IPCC estimate of >50%. And that agriculture is responsible for >50%, versus the famous IPCC that put it more like 25-30%. And most of that 'agriculture' score is due to one thing: livestock, or 'animal ag'. This makes sense to me since we can see human climate effects through history (in ice cores) when a continental region got put under the plow, or regrew forest (after the Black Death).
The IPCC (and similar vintage climate activists like Gore and Gates) are openly dismissive of any attempts to mitigate livestock emissions for climate goals... they admit that it is important, but that it should be ignored 'tactically' as it is politically untenable. So there will likely be a battle royale between those activists who want to follow the science (like scientists and maybe younger people) and those who have other priorities or ideas.
I can't resist a video that takes a dig at Bill.

A side note (not discussed in the video) is that recent efforts to reduce N2O and particulates (since 1990 especially) could have greatly accelerated recent warming. Similar to the idea that reducing sulfur in shipping fuel had a recent, rapid warming effect too.
Change is coming, and fighting climate change is about to look a lot different than it did 10 years ago. On the bright side, it might be more effective too.
At least I hope so! 🤞