Negatives from more C02:
- The added heat cancels out any short termed positive effect for some of the plants. A 20 years study of crops grown under enhanced CO2 finds that there is an upper limit to C3 enhancement from CO2, while C4 plants, after a sufficient length of time, adapt to high CO2 by improving their uptake of nitrogen. So: Increased CO2 ultimately depresses C3 growth, while C4 plants, which include numerous pest varieties, will become more vigorous. The net result is depressed food production.
- Weeds benefits faster from more C02
- Biodiversity is already affected by GW
- Insects and their habitats are already affected by pollutions and CC
- Oxygen producing phytoplankton in the oceans are already effected by global warming.
- Farmers world wide are hit hard by floods and drougts. Natural Disasters Are Costing Farming Billions of Dollars a Year
- Greening the earth adds to the land albedo effect and is amplifying global warming
- Increased carbon dioxide levels in air restrict plants' ability to absorb nutrients
- Plant quality declines as CO2 levels rise
- Climate change happening 'too fast' for plant and animal species to adapt
- CO2 enhanced plants will need extra water both to maintain their larger growth as well as to compensate for greater moisture evaporation as the heat increases. Where will it come from? In many places rainwater is not sufficient for current agriculture and the aquifers they rely on are running dry throughout the Earth.
Greening the earth adds to the land albedo effect;
As the land warms up, trees and forests migrate north. White snow that reflects sunlight back to space is covered with dark green leaves or dark brown tree trunks and branches, which absorb sunlight and convert it to heat, with the same effect of amplifying global warming.
Darkening the earth's albedo is a very bad idea right now.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-15/natural-disasters-are-costing-farming-billions-of-dollars-a-year
Crop failure and bankruptcy threaten farmers as drought grips Europe

The "C02 is good for plants" argument debunked:
Two major groups of plants have shown a surprising reversal of fortunes in the face of rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
During a 20-year field experiment in Minnesota, a widespread group of plants that initially grew faster when fed more CO2 stopped doing so after 12 years, researchers report in the April 20 Science.
A 16-year study found that we’re at a point where more CO2 won’t keep increasing plant production, but higher temperatures will decrease it
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2016/sep/19/new-study-undercuts-favorite-climate-myth-more-co2-is-good-for-plants
IPCC report warns of future climate change risks, but is spun by contrarians | Dana Nuccitelli
Warming rivals habitat loss and land degradation as a threat to global wildlife
Worrying the Facts Versus Challenging the (Hidden) Premise
The CO2-Is-Plant-Food argument, at least as used by conservative climate skeptics, has two parts. The first is the “scientific” claim that CO2 is good for plants. The second is the policy implication: therefore, CO2 should not be regulated so as to slow or reverse its increase. But the implication only seems to follow from the claim. To actually get to this policy, one must also assume a broader rule or premise: things that are good for plants are not regulated.
Such claims fail to take into account that increasing the availability of one substance that plants need requires other supply changes for benefits to accrue. It also fails to take into account that a warmer earth will see an increase in deserts and other arid lands, reducing the area available for crops. Plants cannot live on CO2 alone; a complete plant metabolism depends on a number of elements. [...] CO2 enhanced plants will need extra water both to maintain their larger growth as well as to compensate for greater moisture evaporation as the heat increases. Where will it come from? In many places rainwater is not sufficient for current agriculture and the aquifers they rely on are running dry throughout the Earth.
Scientists believe that phytoplankton contribute between 50 to 85 percent of the oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere.
Researchers at Canada's Dalhousie University say the global population of phytoplankton has fallen about 40 percent since 1950. This is caused by AGW:
http://earthsky.org/earth/how-much-do-oceans-add-to-worlds-oxygen

The right combination of warm water, high nutrient levels, and adequate sunlight combined can cause a harmful algae bloom.
http://www.climatecentral.org/gallery/graphics/algae-blooms-and-climate-change
A new study by scientists at Stanford University, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, tested whether hotter temperatures and higher carbon dioxide levels that we’ll see post-2050 will benefit the kinds of plants that live in California grasslands. They found that carbon dioxide at higher levels than today (400 ppm) did not significantly change plant growth, while higher temperatures had a negative effect.The Stanford scientists set up 132 plots of flowers and grass in California and introduced varying levels of carbon dioxide, temperature, water, and nitrogen. The scientists conducted the experiments over 16 growing seasons between 1998 and 2014. They found that only higher nitrogen levels resulted in higher plant productivity, while higher temperatures caused it to decline.
Co-author Dr Philippe Ciais, from the Laboratory of Climate and Environmental Sciences in Gif-sur‑Yvette, France (also an IPCC author), said: "The fallacy of the contrarian argument is two-fold. First, the many negative aspects of climate change are not acknowledged. "Second, studies have shown that plants acclimatise to rising CO2 concentration and the fertilisation effect diminishes over time." Future growth is also limited by other factors, such as lack of water or nutrients.
Climate change on track to cause major insect wipeout, scientists warn
A report from The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), concludes that 75% of our food crops and nearly 90% of wild flowering plants depend at least to some extent on animal pollination and that a high diversity of wild pollinators is critical to pollination even when managed bees are present in high numbers.
It’s official. As tragically revealing as the move might be, the rusty patched bumble bee has now joined the grizzly bear, gray wolf, northern spotted owl, and some 700 others on the endangered species list — the first bee ever to garner those protections in the continental United States.
C02 ER "BARE" EN SPORGASS
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/07/29/epa-document-supports-3-of-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide-is-attributable-to-human-sources/
Selv om våre utslipp bare er en liten del av karbonkretsløpet, kommer det altså i tillegg til det som allerede er der, og blir i atmosfæren i svært lang tid. Derfor øker nivåene, og dermed temperaturen. Drypper det fra kranen ned i badekaret ditt, selv om dette bare er en liten dråpe, vil det en likevel en vakker dag renne over.
The total mass of ozone in the atmosphere is about 3 billion metric tons. That may seem like a lot, but it is only 0.00006 percent of the atmosphere. Still, Ozone protects life on Earth from the Sun’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
The area bounded by the plot is proportional to the integral of the power spectrum, which is EQUAL to the total emitted IR power. This is a mathematical identity and not a matter of opinion. Anything which reduces the area under the plot, is reducing the total outflow of infrared radiation which we refer to as the 'greenhouse effect' we can even 'eyeball' the extent of the CO2 effect from the area of the CO2 notch which is about 130/cm across and 80mW/(m^2 sr cm^-1) tall i.e. 130 x 80 = 10,400mW/(m^2 sr) or 10.4W/(m^2 sr). We must multiply by pi to integrate over the total solid angle and we arrive at 32.6 W/m^2 .. the amount by which CO2 contributes to the total greenhouse effect (about 25%) which is also due to ozone, water vapour, clouds, methane, nitrous oxide and HFCs
Vi mennesker slipper ut 36 milliarder tonn med C02 hvert år. "CO2 utgjør 400 ppm (0,040%) av atmosfæren. Hvordan kan en så liten mengde være viktig? Poenget er dette: Hvor mye CO2 utgjør av atmosfæren er en sammenligning som ikke betyr så mye. Det er bare drivhusgassene som kan fange opp varmestråling. Det resten av atmosfæren bidrar med, er bare å overta varme fra CO2, vanndamp og co. når de først har fanget den opp.
However, when CO2 is used to explain an increase in greenhouse effect, then it has suddenly become so small, so insignificant and powerless. So tiiiiiiiiny. Just a traaaaaace.
Pollution is not a measure of somethings make-up, it is about how much of it you have and where. Water is great in the sea. Not great when flooding your house.






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