My understanding is yes and No.
Global warming projections tend to be done for the next century or two. Plate tectonics for instance won't have a meaningful effect within that time frame.(continents move slowly)
Some of the other items are taken into account but are variables. So you might say that if we dump a certain amount of co2 in the atmosphere then the temperature will increase between a certain range. Depending on those other variables we should fall somewhere within the range. If there happens to be natural cooling trend we will probably end up on the low side and if there is a natural warming trend we will probably end up hitting the higher side of that range.
So everything we can talk about has a pair of properties: an extensive factor and an intensive factor, on whatever parameter we are looking at. . . . time is one parameter and temperature is another. That makes a minimum of four aspects that need to be kept more or less in mind. . . . while most of our comments are just dealing with one of these at any given time.
history is not prologue. The only value of knowing the past events is being able to put now in perspective. If our discussion omits that perspective, our discussion is worthless.
So, what is wrong. . . . very wrong. . . . damn wrong. . . about the entire "global warming" alarm and everything our current trend of scientists leading the charge in calling this a crisis. . . . is they are lying about the past, and putting now in a false perspective.
The truth about the past is the fact that over the past hundreds of millions of years, the cause of ice ages has been the sequestration of carbon dioxide in geological formations. . . . limestone and dolomite. . . . on a scale that makes our combustion truly irrelevant. The portion of what used to be atmospheric carbon dioxide that has been converted to plant matter is small. . . . what has been converted to fossil fuels. . .oil, coal, gas. . . . is even less. The facts of the worldwide massive carbonate deposits, which are essentially irreversible, is the prevailing significant fact of the whole discussion. It means our atmosphere is too low in carbon dioxide, and that is what is causing our ice ages.
We are in an ice age, though in a very short-term interglacial phase of it, and the earth is too cold. If we have a problem, it will be that we are going to get colder.
The fact that during this interglacial phase we have built our cities on the edges of oceans subject to short-term level changes, and in areas that will become glaciated, is the real problem of our infrastructure globally. We should expect to rebuild as we move from interglacial to glacial phases, and back to interglacial. We are not going to control our sea levels or our temperatures. The sooner we realize that we are not going to end our ice age problem by not burning fuels anymore, the sooner we will actually begin to solve the problem.
Our current trend of politicians are entirely mistaken, and they are willing to take control of us and force us to do all the wrong things to solve our real problems.
People who refuse to see the point here are dangerous, and giving them the power to impose their inherently false imperatives on us is the wrong thing to do.
People like our current trendy progressives who have taken personal positions, as Al Gore has done, to exploit a false "crisis" and benefit from false "solutions" are truly the bane of our age.