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I’m extremely skeptical of these sorts of statements. “Social cost” calculations usually combine highly dubious science with completely nonsensical economics.
That said, if it’s toxic at all, then it is vastly more dangerous than CO2.
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“1430x damaging to climate” is meaningless. I know how they come up with those numbers and it’s nowhere near as precise or scientific as they make it seem.
Out of curiosity, what do you think “damaging to climate” means?
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I don't believe in these type of bullshit propaganda. What I believe is what I can practically sense. And I don't know exactly but 'climate change' is real. Before 30 years and now a huge difference! This difference is visible in rising temperatures. So, anything that's causing it is a possible damage to climate.
The , there's a big thinking back in my mind. 'Man is not as big as Nature.' Nature can easily overturn any bad impact in so less time!
So, instead of stop complaining for chemistry, we must focus on reforestation.
More than anything, deforestation has caused this rise in temperatures. This is what I actually believe.
However, I've been running a little local community that does some awareness campaigns for 'the importance of trees', I read and consume a lot of media related to 'climate change'.
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So, what could "1430x climate damage" reasonably mean? Note that it isn't just "climate change".
There are basically two methods used to create these numbers:
  1. Someone creates a score, that has no inherent meaning, based on a bunch of different properties. In that case, the precise values aren't meaningful, but higher and lower can be useful for categorizing different compounds.
  2. A climate model with very large known flaws and wide standard errors is used to create an estimate that is then fed into an economic model that is known to be severely flawed. The reported number in this case is the estimated economic damage, but the confidence intervals are so large that you can't rule out that there's no effect.
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Climate change models have too many variables that inflate correlation. The curse of multidimensional
I am more worried about asteroids and volcanoes
Regarding deforestation, one problem with trees is excessive water consumption which hurts dry regions and areas affected by drought
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