March 9th, 2010

Hydrogen Convergence makes Climate Sensitivity Manageable

There was term we used in the 1990’s for a potentially catastrophic scenario once we had figured out a solution. The phrase was “challenging but manageable.” We at the ebTDesign Forum would advise readers and social media followers that hydrogen convergence makes climate sensitivity challenging but manageable.

Climate sensitivity is the near-surface air temperature phenomenon that describes how the earth reacts to fluctuations in the global concentration of green house gases.  The challenge is helping non-scientists understand that a minute change in the average global temperature will trigger catastrophic failures and lead to massive job losses.

Working and middle class Americans should be provided with technologies that will reduce the leap of faith they must take to combat the threat posed by climate sensitivity. Hydrogen Convergence can do this by addressing the production of green house gases from fossil fuels and non-fossil fuel sources. The first step is to move the tail pipe so that cars run cleaner then by using renewable energy and carbon neutral energy feedstock to generate hydrogen. This makes climate sensitivity manageable.

There was a time when something occurring in an “instant” had meaning. Now we ask, “Is that instant measured in microseconds or nanoseconds?” With the advent of computers, we have learned to live in world that is composed of smaller and smaller elements. We at the ebTDesign Forum propose that the current generation of young people will do the same when it comes to understanding climate sensitivity.

Zachary Alexander

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The IT Investment Architect helps communities increase their capacity for innovation.

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