PoloMalo43
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You guys should point them to Watts' site so they can get the truth from a weatherman who dropped out of college, those NASA fools.
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/06/30/3454554/nasa-satellite-carbon-measuring/
NASA Launching Carbon-Tracking Satellite In Search Of Climate Change Answers
By Ari Phillips on June 30, 2014 at 12:42 pm
This May 15, 2014, artist concept rendering provided by NASA shows their Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO)-2. The OCO-2, managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., will launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., on a Delta II rocket on July 1, 2014.
CREDIT: AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech
While in the political world carbon dioxide can still be referred to as an invisible, harmless gas for years scientists at NASA have been studying the way its dramatic rise in atmospheric concentration is affecting life on earth. On Tuesday morning, in a major landmark in understanding this relationship, NASA is launching a satellite to inventory where and how carbon is absorbed and released across the planet. It will be the nation’s first satellite exclusively monitoring carbon dioxide.
The OCO-2, or Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2, will track CO2 as it’s emitted from smokestacks and tailpipes and absorbed into the ocean or taken up by plant life. Carbon dioxide levels are currently at their highest atmospheric concentration in the last 800,000 to 15 million years. Recent data shows that June will be the third month in a row with average carbon dioxide levels above 400 parts per million — a symbolic threshold first passed on May 9, 2013. With humans adding some 100 million tons of CO2 to the atmosphere every day, scientists are anxious to better understand where all the carbon dioxide is going and what it will mean for climate change.
“Knowing what parts of Earth are helping to remove carbon from our atmosphere will help us understand whether they can keep on doing so in future,” project scientist Michael Gunson, of Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told the Associated Press. “Quantifying these sinks now will help us predict how fast CO2 will build up in the future.”
FOLLOW LINK FOR THE REST OF THE STORY
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/06/30/3454554/nasa-satellite-carbon-measuring/
NASA Launching Carbon-Tracking Satellite In Search Of Climate Change Answers
By Ari Phillips on June 30, 2014 at 12:42 pm

This May 15, 2014, artist concept rendering provided by NASA shows their Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO)-2. The OCO-2, managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., will launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., on a Delta II rocket on July 1, 2014.
CREDIT: AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech
While in the political world carbon dioxide can still be referred to as an invisible, harmless gas for years scientists at NASA have been studying the way its dramatic rise in atmospheric concentration is affecting life on earth. On Tuesday morning, in a major landmark in understanding this relationship, NASA is launching a satellite to inventory where and how carbon is absorbed and released across the planet. It will be the nation’s first satellite exclusively monitoring carbon dioxide.
The OCO-2, or Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2, will track CO2 as it’s emitted from smokestacks and tailpipes and absorbed into the ocean or taken up by plant life. Carbon dioxide levels are currently at their highest atmospheric concentration in the last 800,000 to 15 million years. Recent data shows that June will be the third month in a row with average carbon dioxide levels above 400 parts per million — a symbolic threshold first passed on May 9, 2013. With humans adding some 100 million tons of CO2 to the atmosphere every day, scientists are anxious to better understand where all the carbon dioxide is going and what it will mean for climate change.
“Knowing what parts of Earth are helping to remove carbon from our atmosphere will help us understand whether they can keep on doing so in future,” project scientist Michael Gunson, of Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told the Associated Press. “Quantifying these sinks now will help us predict how fast CO2 will build up in the future.”
FOLLOW LINK FOR THE REST OF THE STORY