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Global Warming...New Report...and it ain't happy news

 
 
roger
 
  2  
Reply Tue 21 Mar, 2023 05:38 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Walter Hinteler wrote:

Now scientists have calculated that more than three trillion tonnes of ice have been lost there within 25 years.

Ah, but three trillion tons of water have been found! Try to look on the bright side.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Wed 22 Mar, 2023 12:55 pm
Naturkatastrophen haben im vergangenen Jahr weltweit wirtschaftliche Schäden in Höhe von 275 Milliarden Dollar (255 Milliarden Euro) verursacht. Davon waren 125 Milliarden Dollar versichert, wie der Schweizer Rückversicherer Swiss Re am Mittwoch mitteilte .

Swiss Re warned of even higher costs in the future in view of advancing climate change. The German Insurance Association (GDV) called the reinsurer's report "alarming." "The more dynamically the entire economy advances the transformation and slows down global warming, the fewer consequential costs will have to be shouldered." Prevention and climate impact adaptation are therefore "the linchpin to ensure that losses from natural catastrophes, and thus insurance premiums, do not get out of hand financially."

Insured losses from natural catastrophes break through USD 100 billion threshold again in 2022
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  2  
Reply Sat 25 Mar, 2023 05:20 am
https://i.pinimg.com/564x/81/5d/d8/815dd8741c2115028dd1d5f5e2055a32.jpg
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 25 Mar, 2023 05:51 am
@hingehead,
Okay, but why is our ability to "imagine" a healthy future anything more than a fantasy?

To whom are we supposed to address our "demand" for a livable planet?

Umair Haque wrote:
I’m not saying we’re doomed. I’m just saying that the greatest crisis in human history, all 300,000 years of it, is now upon us, and well, here we are, pretending that hating each other, worshipping some billionaire, celebrity, AI, creepy authoritarian, or desperately ignoring the fear, pain, and hurt, whatever way we can, is going to solve it. Nope, totally…not doomed. Surely “doom” isn’t when you put your PIN code in the ATM and nothing comes out. Or when you turn the tap and drip, drip. Or when the price of food is 100% of your healthy middle-class salary. When billionaires build bunkers and operate their weird fascist comms platforms from them, because, why not add to the chaos? Is it doom when human longevity and mortality take a hit because, well, now nothing works, and it’s every person for themselves, on a dying planet? When crop yields are off by 50%? That’s not doom, is it?

medium
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Sun 26 Mar, 2023 12:13 pm
Today's referendum for more ambitious climate targets in (the German state) Berlin failed.
The necessary minimum number of yes votes could no longer be achieved, the state election administration announced on Sunday evening shortly before the counting was completed.

An alliance called "Klimaneustart" (Climate Start) wanted the vote to change the state's energy transition law. Specifically, Berlin should commit to becoming climate-neutral by 2030 and not by 2045 as previously planned.

After about 98 per cent of the votes were counted, the supporters were just ahead of the opponents of such a change in the law. However, this only fulfilled one prerequisite for a successful referendum. The second requirement, a quorum of at least 25 per cent of all eligible voters, was not met.

Shortly before the end of the count, there were about 423,000 votes in favour and about 405,000 votes against. The quorum for a successful referendum, however, was about 608,000 votes in favour.
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Mar, 2023 12:35 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Thanks for this information. I was following that campaign. Demanding a "livable planet" is one thing – actually doing anything about it is a different matter. The economic costs, the political ramifications, and the increasing rate of warming – a toxic mixture that doesn't bode well.
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Mar, 2023 12:44 pm
@hightor,
The good news is that the climate initiative got more yes votes than no votes.

Unfortunately, climate neutrality in Berlin is now always no longer a "goal" as before, but not an "obligation". And also not until 2045 (target), not already (obligation!) 2030.
Other German states are no further along, in some cases even further behind.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Wed 29 Mar, 2023 01:54 am
In latest blow to Joe Biden’s reputation as the ‘climate president’, 73.3m acres of the Gulf of Mexico will be offered for fossil fuel extraction.

Italy-sized chunk of Gulf of Mexico to be auctioned off by the US for oil drilling
Quote:
An enormous swathe of the Gulf of Mexico, spanning an area the size of Italy, will be auctioned off for oil and gas drilling on Wednesday morning, in the latest blow to Joe Biden’s increasingly frayed reputation on dealing with the climate crisis.

Biden’s department of interior is offering up a vast area of the central and western Gulf, including plunging deep water reaches, for drilling projects that will stretch out over decades, despite scientists’ urgent warnings that fossil fuels must be rapidly phased out if the world is to avoid disastrous global heating. The auctions also come despite Biden’s own pre-election promise to halt all drilling on federal lands and waters.

In all, 73.3m acres (30m hectares), an area roughly the size of Italy, will be made available to drilling companies, less than a month before the 13th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster. The sale, known as lease 259, has the potential to extract more than 1bn barrels of oil and 4.4tn cubic feet of gas over the next 50 years, according to the US federal government.

The auctions come just two weeks after Biden’s administration approved the controversial Willow project, a drilling endeavor in the remote tundra of Alaska’s arctic that will remove more than 600m barrels of oil over its lifetime, and the two actions have caused major alarm among those in favor of a livable climate, including Biden’s usual allies.

“For the first half of his presidency, Joe Biden led on climate with transformative vision but in the second half he seems to be signaling a disastrous climate U-turn,” Ben Jealous, executive director of the Sierra Club and a prominent progressive, said.

https://i.imgur.com/81nhLzRm.jpg

Last summer, Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act (or IRA), a landmark bill that the president lauded as the “biggest step forward on climate ever”. The sweeping legislation has billions of dollars in support for renewable energy projects and electric car subsidies, but it also included stipulations that large areas of the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska be made available for fossil fuel drilling in order to appease Joe Manchin, a pro-coal Democratic senator and key swing vote.

Climate campaigners mostly considered the trade-off to be worthwhile as the resulting emissions cuts should still be large, but the new glut of drilling could wipe out much of the benefits of wind and solar projects over the next decade.

“If this continues, all of the good Biden has done for the future will be undone by Biden himself,” said Jealous.

“If he’s making a political calculation, he’s making a wrong one. He’s breaking a major promise on drilling and by going back on his word he will inspire many young people to stay at home rather than voting in 2024. His decisions appear to be rooted in the political and economic calculus of the last century, not this one.”

The White House has pointed to a series of complicating factors to its climate agenda, such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has sped up the construction of oil and gas export terminals in the US, bound for European allies, as well as a closely divided Congress and various legal obstacles.

On Friday, Biden said that he was inclined to block the Willow project, only to be told by administration lawyers that ConocoPhillips, the owner of the project lease, would likely sue and win to secure it. “My strong inclination was to disapprove of it across the board but the advice I got from counsel was that if that were the case, I may very well lose,” the president said.

The administration has also indicated that the terms of the Inflation Reduction Act also compel the Gulf of Mexico sales, although opponents argue that such a large area did not need to be put up for sale.

A separate, even larger, tract of the gulf, known as lease 257, has been enmeshed in a legal battle and the latest lease blocks will also likely end up in court, with a coalition of green groups suing this month to stop it. It’s also unclear how much interest there will be from industry – an auction of leases in December for the Cook Inlet in Alaska yielded just one bid.

“These leases were brought back to life by the IRA but there was no legal reason to offer almost the entire Gulf of Mexico to the oil and gas industry,” said George Torgun, an attorney at Earthjustice, which claims the drilling, aside from its climate impacts, will further burden communities of color who live beside polluting refineries along the coast and endanger the Rice’s whale, a species endemic to the gulf with fewer than 50 individuals remaining.

“This is locking in decades of fossil fuel use when we should be heading in another direction,” said Torgun. “It’s out of step with what Biden himself has called the existential threat of climate change.”

The department of interior’s bureau of ocean energy management, which is overseeing the lease sales, did not respond to a request for comment. The National Ocean Industries Association, a lobby group for offshore drillers, has said that allowing the leases provides a “key component of a national energy strategy that will ensure Americans can continue to have access to fundamental domestic energy that is produced safely, sustainably, and responsibly”.

The Earth’s climate system is uncompromising, however. The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report warned that 3 billion people around the world are already suffering from severe climate impacts and that the world’s temperature will likely rise beyond 1.5C, unleashing much worse misery, within a decade if fossil fuels aren’t radically pared back.

“The truth is Earth doesn’t care about politics, it cares about greenhouse gases in atmosphere,” said Alex Ruane, a Nasa climate scientist and lead IPCC author.

“Even since the last IPCC report in 2021 we have put a substantial chunk of the carbon budget into the atmosphere. Action and inaction are both choices and at present we are getting closer every day to those temperature targets.”
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Wed 29 Mar, 2023 05:58 am
Swiss seniors sue government in rights court over climate
Quote:
The European Court of Human Rights will hear a case brought by Swiss senior citizens against their government over alleged inaction in preventing climate change. French climate policy will also be put on trial.

For the first time in the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg, governments are on trial for purported climate change inaction.

The cases have been filed by an association of Swiss senior citizens and a French former mayor.

Why is Bern being sued?
The association of elderly people also called the "Club of Climate Seniors," has filed a case against Switzerland over concerns of global warming's consequences on their living conditions and health, according to the ECHR.

They blame the Swiss authorities for various climate change failings. The association says this amount to a violation of the government's mandate to protect life and citizens' homes and families.

Switzerland experienced heat waves in 2022, compelling Volkoff to stay indoors for 11 weeks with just short outings. Referring to the situation as a "climate lockdown" in which her activities are limited by conditions outside, she described the situation as worse than the COVID-19 pandemic and a violation of her human rights.

"I have had to enormously restrict my activities, to wait, with the blinds down and the air conditioning on — shame for an ecologist! — for the heat wave to pass, allowing me to go back to normal life," she wrote in a letter.

Other women in the case described shortness of breath, nausea and even loss of consciousness during the heat waves, which are increasing in frequency due to climate change.

This is the first-ever climate case before the ECHR. The hearing on Wednesday has been described as historic.

"This is a historic event," said Anne Mahrer, 64, a member of the Club of Climate Seniors.

French government in the court's dock too
Damien Careme, a former mayor in northern France has presented a case against France in the ECHR.

He said the central government has failed to meet its obligation to protect citizens' lives by not taking sufficient steps to prevent climate change.

At the French judiciary, Careme filed a case on behalf of his town and his own when he was mayor. He argued that climate change was raising the risk of his home being flooded.

Although the highest administrative court found in favor of the town against the central government, the individual case was thrown out. Prompting Careme to take it to the ECHR.

High stakes trials
According to Corinne Lepage, a former French ecology minister and one of Careme's lawyers, "the stakes are extremely high."

"If the European court recognizes that climate failings violate the rights of individuals to life and a normal family life, then that becomes precedent in all of the council's member states and potentially in the whole world," she said.

Strasbourg has fast-tracked the hearing, meaning judges are set to decide within a year instead of the usual three.

dmn/sms (AFP, Reuters, AP)

Marie-Eve Volkoff, 85, is suing the government alongside the association with a membership of around 2,000 other elderly women for what she calls "climate lockdown".
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Sun 2 Apr, 2023 06:39 am
Quote:
There are feasible adaptation options that support infrastructure resilience, reliable power systems and efficient water use for existing and new energy generation systems (very high confidence). Energy generation diversification (e.g., via wind, solar, small scale hydropower) and demand side management (e.g., storage and energy efficiency improvements) can increase energy reliability and reduce vulnerabilities to climate change (high confidence). Climate responsive energy markets, updated design standards on energy assets according to current and projected climate change, smart-grid technologies, robust transmission systems and improved capacity to respond to supply deficits have high feasibility in the medium- to long-term, with mitigation co-benefits (very high confidence).
ipcc

Investment banks should have been putting investment into all of that stuff. But they haven’t been, and so we don’t have any of that stuff yet as a civilization. The situation’s so absurdly bad that we have…a handful of green steel plants. No real replacement for plastic. No idea how to make fossil-fuel free food, water, or energy at a civilizational scale.

Now. When I say that investment banks should have been investing in this stuff, I’m not just moralizing. I’m making an economic point. Why should they have been investing in this stuff? Because the rest of the stuff? The Industrial Age stuff? It’s going bad. It’s all past its sell by date.

umairhaque

"We'll go down in history as the first society that wouldn't save itself because it wasn't cost-effective."

... Kurt Vonnegut
Frank Apisa
 
  2  
Reply Sun 2 Apr, 2023 07:41 am
@hightor,
hightor wrote:

Quote:
There are feasible adaptation options that support infrastructure resilience, reliable power systems and efficient water use for existing and new energy generation systems (very high confidence). Energy generation diversification (e.g., via wind, solar, small scale hydropower) and demand side management (e.g., storage and energy efficiency improvements) can increase energy reliability and reduce vulnerabilities to climate change (high confidence). Climate responsive energy markets, updated design standards on energy assets according to current and projected climate change, smart-grid technologies, robust transmission systems and improved capacity to respond to supply deficits have high feasibility in the medium- to long-term, with mitigation co-benefits (very high confidence).
ipcc


Investment banks should have been putting investment into all of that stuff. But they haven’t been, and so we don’t have any of that stuff yet as a civilization. The situation’s so absurdly bad that we have…a handful of green steel plants. No real replacement for plastic. No idea how to make fossil-fuel free food, water, or energy at a civilizational scale.

Now. When I say that investment banks should have been investing in this stuff, I’m not just moralizing. I’m making an economic point. Why should they have been investing in this stuff? Because the rest of the stuff? The Industrial Age stuff? It’s going bad. It’s all past its sell by date.

umairhaque

"We'll go down in history as the first society that wouldn't save itself because it wasn't cost-effective."

... Kurt Vonnegut



Actually, if we do not save ourselves...we will be the ONLY society that wouldn't.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Fri 7 Apr, 2023 04:51 am
Global Hating

How online abuse of climate scientists harms climate action

Quote:

Introduction

Imagine that you’ve spent years studying glacial retreat in the Arctic. You believe you have a duty to share your findings that reveal how our world is changing with a wider public. But you remember having trouble sleeping after getting hateful messages on Twitter the last time you published your work there, and the death threat your colleague received after talking about her work online. Do you hold off from posting?

For decades, scientists have been documenting changes in the earth’s climate and warning of the effects. Their findings underpin government declarations of climate emergency and policy responses. But our new investigation reveals that online harassment and abuse against climate scientists imperils their work and ways of communicating.

In a survey of 468 scientists around the world working on climate topics, we found online abuse is common, and for many takes a mental and physical toll that inhibits climate discourse. Yet there are ways to stem it. Most abuse took place on Twitter and Facebook, platforms that can instead make reforms to protect scientists and enable informed publics and responsive climate action.

(more)
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Fri 7 Apr, 2023 08:01 am
@hightor,
I've been writing on the internet in a wide variety of online environments for nearly thirty years. I've always written as either blatham or Bernie Latham, never hid my opinions and have always been open about where I live. And I've never received a threat of physical violence until this last month where it has happened twice. Both instances on Facebook and both involving men from this province. I'm not concerned anything will come of these threats but I'm tempted to conclude that things might be getting worse.

Region Philbis
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Apr, 2023 08:37 am
@blatham,

FFS.

hope at the very least you reported those accounts to FB...
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Fri 7 Apr, 2023 10:36 am
Green groups sue to stop Ohio from leasing state parks for oil and gas drilling
Quote:
New law – condemned as ‘illegitimate giveaway to the oil and gas industry’ – requires state parks to be leased to interested parties


Environmental groups have launched a last-minute effort to halt an extraordinary new law in Ohio that requires government agencies to lease state parks and other public state lands to the oil and gas industry.

A temporary injunction filed on Thursday seeks to put the brakes on legislation that requires state parks to be leased for fracking and which redefines the potent greenhouse gas methane as “green energy”. The law was due to go into effect on 7 April, but the court has not yet responded to the injunction.

The law, which began life as an agricultural bill about the number of poultry chicks that can be sold at one time, quickly grew in scope and size to grant wins for agriculture corporate giants, and the fossil fuel and petrochemical industries.

In addition to giving carte blanche to the fossil fuel industry to frack Ohio’s 75, very popular, state parks, the sweeping bill also includes new provisions for agriculture and electric utilities, as well as a ban on the sale of dyed chicks, rabbits and ducklings.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of campaign groups Buckeye Environmental Network, Ohio Valley Allies, the Sierra Club and the Ohio Environmental Council, alleges that the law is unconstitutional. The groups say it violates the state constitution’s one-subject rule, which requires laws to contain one subject that is clearly expressed in the title, and the three-consideration rule, which requires the legislature to consider every bill on three separate days.

“This law is nothing more than an illegitimate giveaway to the oil and gas industry,” said Megan Hunter, an attorney for Earthjustice, the legal non-profit representing some of the appellants. “We will defend Ohio’s public lands from this unconstitutional attack.”

State lawmakers passed the expansive bill with little discussion or fanfare after a final reading in the Ohio senate chambers during a lame-duck session at the end of 2022.

Ignoring pressure to veto the bill, Governor Mike DeWine signed it into the statute book on 6 January after reassuring protesters he would prohibit any new drilling in Ohio state parks – even though the law removes the state’s discretion to deny those leases.

Oil and gas leasing was already allowed at state parks, but the new law mandates state agencies to lease to any interested party with insurance and financial assurances that has registered with the Ohio natural resources department – without going to auction or giving public notice or opportunity for public comment.

In addition, the new law defines methane gas as “green energy” – a term typically reserved for solar, wind and other renewable energy sources. Methane is a fossil fuel greenhouse gas that traps heat in the atmosphere at 80 times the rate of carbon dioxide, which is responsible for about 25% of the heat trapped by all greenhouse gases.

An outside dark-money group with ties to the gas industry helped push a false narrative that the law will help the transition to clean energy, according to the Washington Post.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Fri 7 Apr, 2023 12:54 pm
@Region Philbis,
Quote:
hope at the very least you reported those accounts to FB...

I did.
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  2  
Reply Tue 11 Apr, 2023 10:54 pm
Sigh.
https://i.pinimg.com/564x/e7/5c/dd/e75cdd19c6321d9fa3689f84b9eb8922.jpg
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Thu 13 Apr, 2023 12:58 pm
In the coming decades, even if global warming increases only relatively modestly, flash droughts will become even more common and speedier in almost every region of the globe.

A global transition to flash droughts under climate change
Quote:
Dry in a flash

Are flash droughts, those that develop unusually rapidly unlike those that develop more slowly and typically have been considered the archetype, becoming the new normal? Yuan et al. show that droughts have begun to intensify more rapidly since the 1950s and that flash droughts have become more common over much of the world (see the Perspective by Walker and Van Loon). This trend, which makes drought monitoring and forecasting more difficult, is associated with greater evapotranspiration and precipitation deficits caused by anthropogenic climate change and is projected to expand to all land areas in the future. —HJS



Abstract

Flash droughts have occurred frequently worldwide, with a rapid onset that challenges drought monitoring and forecasting capabilities. However, there is no consensus on whether flash droughts have become the new normal because slow droughts may also increase. In this study, we show that drought intensification rates have sped up over subseasonal time scales and that there has been a transition toward more flash droughts over 74% of the global regions identified by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on Extreme Events during the past 64 years. The transition is associated with amplified anomalies of evapotranspiration and precipitation deficit caused by anthropogenic climate change. In the future, the transition is projected to expand to most land areas, with larger increases under higher-emission scenarios. These findings underscore the urgency for adapting to faster-onset droughts in a warmer future.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2023 03:27 am
The battle for water has begun - in the middle of Europe:
Farmers want a water basin for their fields, environmentalists are demonstrating against it, there is violence: In Sainte-Soline, France, the distortions brought about by climate change are already becoming apparent.

Mild temperatures and regular rainfall throughout the year make Sainte-Soline in western France an ideal agricultural location - actually. But in recent years, the small French community has been suffering from extreme drought. Farmers therefore regularly fear for their harvest.

That is why a reservoir is to be built in the region to artificially irrigate the agricultural land when needed. Hundreds of farmers support the project.


But not everyone is enthusiastic about the project. There are already more than 100 such basins in France. Opponents call them "mega-basins" and are also against them because they are partly fed by groundwater. In their view, a few farmers are usurping scarce water resources, while everyone in the region is suffering from climate change.

The water distribution struggle culminated in a large demonstration at the end of March, during which there were violent clashes. Three police vehicles went up in flames. The gendarmerie used tear gas and water cannons. There were casualties on both sides - and only losers.

The example of Sainte-Soline not only shows the pent-up anger within French society, where the camps are irreconcilably opposed to each other. It also shows where the struggle for increasingly scarce water could also lead in western industrialised countries. The government now wants to take countermeasures with a water plan. How well it works will be seen in the summer - when the country is likely to become even drier.

Last Wednesday, actions continued after the Administrative Court uphold 16 water reservoir projects.

Sainte-Soline : la justice administrative valide 16 projets de retenues d'eau

Retenues d'eau à Sainte-Soline : la permanence parlementaire de l'Insoumise Charlotte Leduc sous un tas de fumier
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  2  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2023 10:21 am
Quote:

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration floated two ideas this week to reduce water usage from the dwindling Colorado River, which supplies 40 million people.

The 1,450-mile (2,334-kilometer) river is a lifeline for seven U.S. states, dozens of Native American tribes, and two states in Mexico. It irrigates nearly 5.5 million acres (about 2.2 million hectares) of farmland in the U.S. and Mexico and generates hydroelectric power used across the West.

In recent decades, drought, climate change and an imbalance between the river’s flows and how much water users are promised

Tuesday’s analysis from the Interior Department considers two ways to force cuts in the water supply for Arizona, Nevada and California: use the existing water priority system or the same percentage across the board. California and some tribes with senior rights to water benefit more under the first option. Arizona and Nevada, largely with junior rights, don’t feel as much pain under the second.


Federal officials haven’t taken a stance.

WHAT PROMPTED THE ANALYSIS?
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, under the Interior Department, made a bombshell announcement last June as levels in the Colorado River’s key reservoirs dropped to historic lows. Federal officials said water use in the basin would have to be cut by 15% to 30%.


https://apnews.com/article/colorado-river-water-west-california-arizona-5fefe545767b805900f4b967a7c8da25
0 Replies
 
 

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