TheClimateChanger Posted 23 hours ago Share Posted 23 hours ago 11 hours ago, tacoman25 said: Mmmk. Live by the sword, die by the sword. If you want to count on AGW driving monthly anomalies, you also have to account for when a Feb 2021 happens. FWIW, I think a top 5 warmest January in the U.S. is highly unlikely. Just looking at the blocking in AK. I didn't predict that it would be either. I was just pointing out that, with the current anomaly, the second half could be completely normal and it would still be close. With that said, it's pretty much guaranteed to finish in the Top 20, with Top 10 quite likely. As the colder end, in the means, shouldn't be nearly as extreme as the current positive anomaly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FPizz Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago On 1/9/2026 at 10:29 AM, tacoman25 said: That makes things easier, huh? But was he wrong? Like he doesnt lol China has more coal capacity under construction than the entire existing US coal fleet (~230 GW vs ~175 GW). But yeah, let be like them! Dolts Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chubbs Posted 6 hours ago Share Posted 6 hours ago 9 hours ago, FPizz said: Like he doesnt lol China has more coal capacity under construction than the entire existing US coal fleet (~230 GW vs ~175 GW). But yeah, let be like them! Dolts You aren't looking at the whole energy picture. China's use of existing coal plants is dropping. The next few years will tell the tale. Which will slow first in China, new coal or renewable construction? In any case China's energy strategy is much more realistic than ours. They have less fossil fuel and renewable resources than we do, yet their energy is abundant and cheap. We are in energy denial, betting on a horse that is falling further and further behind every day. https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-coal-power-drops-in-china-and-india-for-first-time-in-52-years-after-clean-energy-records/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WolfStock1 Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago 3 hours ago, chubbs said: You aren't looking at the whole energy picture. China's use of existing coal plants is dropping. The next few years will tell the tale. Which will slow first in China, new coal or renewable construction? In any case China's energy strategy is much more realistic than ours. They have less fossil fuel and renewable resources than we do, yet their energy is abundant and cheap. We are in energy denial, betting on a horse that is falling further and further behind every day. https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-coal-power-drops-in-china-and-india-for-first-time-in-52-years-after-clean-energy-records/ In general China is doubling-up their energy production - new fossil plants *and* new renewable (and nuclear) - because they can afford to. They can afford to because they pay their workers roughly 1/3 what US workers are paid, and because they generally don't worry about NIMBY or environmental impact like we do here in the US; e.g. their Medog Hydro project in Tibet. The US hasn't built a significant new dam in 50 years, let alone one close to the size of Medog or Three Gorges. (by comparison our largest - Grand Coulee - is about 1/8 the size of Medog and 1/3 the size of Three Gorges). It's not some kind of anti-renewable / pro=fossil policy that's holding back the US - it's a combination of higher regulation and environmental protection, NIMBYism, the fact that China is less prosperous than the US, and also simple geography. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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