Ya think?
Ya think I'm not aware of that? Get a grip.
It's a possibility, but I still won't predict it as a certainty. You have some crystal ball or something?
Oh, I expect the entire arctic circle to the north pole to be green some day in the future. So?
Quite true. The north pole is in the...
Well, I wouldn't predict a complete loss of ice but there's certainly a huge amount disappearing from places like this;
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/greenland-ice-sheet-reflectivity-near-record-low-research-shows/
http://news.discovery.com/earth/greenland-ice-map-120710.html
lol Wifey has many ideas about what I am, she symbolises me with roses, teddy bears, dragonflies, faeries, tigers, etc. Emmm, not all at once, mind you. :D She swaps tats out like a kid playing with an etchasketch. lol
Anyway, to answer the question of how much a 1% increase in atmospheric water vapor increases global temperature:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=is-water-vapor-in-the-stratosphere-slowing-global-warming
lmao Whatta foocking dipshyte you are. I repeat, "And just to remind you, I already said that I agree with your comment that water vapor is a contributing factor to warming. " 3 times now.
But keep trolling anyway. It's hilarious.
lol That explains why you prefer to ignore facts and instead prefers to keep poking Flossy. And now you seem to favor poking me over having a sensible discussion. Keep trolling. I am humored by it.
And just to remind you, I already said that I agree with your comment that water vapor is a...
WTF? Don't you understand English? Water vapor becomes a GHG only after initiating GHG's raise the temperature. And as the temperature rises, more and more water vapor is introduced to the atmosphere and only then does the effect snowball into a larger factor. At this point in time water vapor...