Since water vapor is considered to be the most potent of all global warming gases,with 75% of the global warming effect, (more than all the other global warming gases combined), I'd like to see an analysis of the offsetting counterbalance caused by water vapor.
As temperatures rise every 20 degrees F, the capacity of air to hold water vapor doubles. But another natural phenomenon, is that highly saturated air tends to rise and form a cloud many miles up into the atmosphere. Eventually we get condensation and the energy loss is expelled into outer-space.