Comment by ant6n 4 months ago The greenhouse effects of flying is about 3-5x the effect of just burning the fuel. 5 comments ant6n Reply mierz00 4 months ago Could you explain why this is? mercutio2 4 months ago Water vapor in the stratosphere has a very high radiative forcing. Offset somewhat by particulates in the upper atmosphere.Cirrus clouds and contrails have a distinct, and large, additional forcing. amadeusw 4 months ago What do you mean by this? What else than burning the fuel contributes to the greenhouse effect? Aeolun 4 months ago Building the airplanes? Servicing them? Heating the airports? DiscourseFan 4 months ago That's nebulous, are we going to claim that for all industrial processes?
mierz00 4 months ago Could you explain why this is? mercutio2 4 months ago Water vapor in the stratosphere has a very high radiative forcing. Offset somewhat by particulates in the upper atmosphere.Cirrus clouds and contrails have a distinct, and large, additional forcing.
mercutio2 4 months ago Water vapor in the stratosphere has a very high radiative forcing. Offset somewhat by particulates in the upper atmosphere.Cirrus clouds and contrails have a distinct, and large, additional forcing.
amadeusw 4 months ago What do you mean by this? What else than burning the fuel contributes to the greenhouse effect? Aeolun 4 months ago Building the airplanes? Servicing them? Heating the airports? DiscourseFan 4 months ago That's nebulous, are we going to claim that for all industrial processes?
Aeolun 4 months ago Building the airplanes? Servicing them? Heating the airports? DiscourseFan 4 months ago That's nebulous, are we going to claim that for all industrial processes?
Could you explain why this is?
Water vapor in the stratosphere has a very high radiative forcing. Offset somewhat by particulates in the upper atmosphere.
Cirrus clouds and contrails have a distinct, and large, additional forcing.
What do you mean by this? What else than burning the fuel contributes to the greenhouse effect?
Building the airplanes? Servicing them? Heating the airports?
That's nebulous, are we going to claim that for all industrial processes?