Mashable
Two of NASA‘s historic data-collecting missions — used by scientists and earthbound agriculturalists to track carbon dioxide and crop health — may be permanently grounded as the Trump administration looks to shrink the agency’s spending.
When they launched over a decade ago, the satellites known as the Orbiting Carbon Observatories (OCOs) revolutionized the collection of carbon data and greenhouse gas science. To put it simply, the OCOs changed how we understand our impact on the planet. Experts rely on the data for studies on greenhouse gases and severe weather and climate disasters, as well as other practical uses, including modeling the effectiveness of eco-friendly transportation on carbon dioxide emissions and even mapping plant photosynthesis and crop failures around the world. More
“..greenhouse gas s̶c̶i̶e̶n̶c̶e̶ FRAUD”
“…modeling the effectiveness of eco-friendly transportation on carbon dioxide emissions”
https://youtu.be/RLdjjDFCrCw?si=figYb-7dWDYuDu3s
Zucchini hot dish last night.
I hope those satellites aren’t flying overhead today.
So are the satellites tracking their own outputs?
“In the past ten years we have measured more of this stuff that we never measured until ten years ago.”