Lots of houses still use wood burning stoves out here .
And we still mine a lot of coal in western Alberta and eastern B.C.
So no wood and coal did not go anywhere .
Really? You are splitting hairs and apparently have no idea how widespread the use of coal and wood were a century ago. Almost every home was heated by one or the other and it was also used in industry. Tell me, how many modern nations still use wood in an industrial capacity? And how many modern nations use coal as the main source of home heating and cooking?
I live in Alberta and have a wood burning fireplace, but I certainly don't use wood to heat the house when it is 30 below. I also used to live on an Alberta farm that had an automatic coal stroker for the furnace. But I'm betting that was phased out decades ago. The fact that less than five percent of the population may still use wood or coal in some capacity does not detract from the truth of my statement.
I hope to be around a few more decades. I also hope that we find an alternative energy. I'm willing to bet that oil will be around for another generation or so and that the AGW crowd will go the way of the blue suede shoes once the public wakes up to the fact that they are having their pockets picked by a bunch of crazies.
I took this video a few weeks ago approximately 200 km south of the Arctic Circle.
Amazingly, it was still frozen two years after Gore's claim.
People love quoting Al Gore when they can find evidence that he is wrong. Those same people tend to be completely ignorant of the realities of global warming. A couple of days ago I saw an article on the Franz-Joseph glacier in New Zealand. The glacier is now almost nonexistent, but when I visited the country in 1975 I went for a walk on it and my wife and I hired a plane to land us in the snowfield where it originated. Sadly both tours are now no longer possible as the glacier has shrunk to about 10% of its original size. The same thing is happening to glaciers world wide, so apparently they seem to know something that you don't.
And just to get the record straight; Al Gore is a politician and not a scientist. What about the thousands of other scientists who believe that the Earth is getting warmer. Are all of them wrong as well?
And since you are going to use anecdotal evidence to support your point of view perhaps I should mention that 90% of the snow in the Edmonton area was gone by the end of February; a full month ahead of schedule. Alberta has jut had one of the warmest and least snowy winters in recorded history and this seems to be part of a trend.