cyclonekiller wrote:Actually the Earth is the pump. Think of it as a giant impeller rotating causing the gulfstream current. With out the current the idea fails since no differential pressure is created across the tunnel.
Hey...here's a concept...answer the questions you've been asked over and over again but keep dodging (this is the fifth time).
1) You finally answered this one.
2) You said there would be no harm to marine life in the Gulf, since the Gulf temps in winter were already used to being in the low 70's. I made the statement that since you wanted to lower summer time Gulf temps into the mid 70's that this would mean wintertime gulf temps would then be lowered into the upper 50's to low 60's. What will the impacts on marine life be in the Gulf when water temps are lowered to that level (since the only reason winter temps are in the low 70's is because summer temps are in the mid 80's).
3) Who is going to pay for the $35+ trillion dollars it would take to do this project? This is 35 trillion in materials alone for the gulf alone. Add labor.
4) Since the Gulf temps would be lowered year around, this would mean more heat in the tropics and less heat transported to the mid-lats...thus a greater temp difference...which is the key ingredient for severe weather. Add to this a plan for the Gulf stream and you also icrease this temp contrast for Europe. The question is: What will happen to winters north of 35N and what will happen to the severe weather season given the fact the jet stream energy will increase and the temp delta will also increase (meaning parameters for summer and winter severe weather will increase)?
5) In lowering the Gulf Stream Temperature and the loop current temp, what will be the net result on the THC? and how will this effect European Winters?