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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day
    DRSH
    DRSH --- ---
    Jan Daňhelka: Je opravdu větší sucho než v roce 2018? | Dvojka
    https://dvojka.rozhlas.cz/jan-danhelka-je-opravdu-vetsi-sucho-nez-v-roce-2018-8216742
    PASTAFARIANKA
    PASTAFARIANKA --- ---
    SHINIGAMI: četl jsi to vůbec?
    SHINIGAMI
    SHINIGAMI --- ---
    Jasne, a vrazdy nam prinesli vyrobci nozu, kteri o tom vedi uz tisice let. Neprijde mi to jako stastny uvod clanku, pokud se clovek ma dohrabat dal.
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    „Hrůza globálního oteplování zastírá naši schopnost vidět budoucnost,“ říká filozof Timothy Morton | Radio Wave
    https://wave.rozhlas.cz/...o-oteplovani-zastira-nasi-schopnost-videt-budoucnost-rika-filozof-8216277
    My víme, kdo nám klimatickou krizi přinesl. Jsou to velké ropné společnosti, které věděly, že globální oteplování způsobené člověkem je skutečné už 50 let. A taky tušíme, co s tím – poslat je do vězení a snižovat uhlíkovou stopu. Ale neděláme to.
    DZODZO
    DZODZO --- ---
    "Podľa prezidentky máme za sebou pandemickú krízu, čelíme ekonomickej kríze, ale nemôžeme zabúdať ani na dôsledky klimatickej krízy. Práve dlhotrvajúce sucho je jedným z nich."

    aspon ze slovenska prezidentka si uvedomuje aka je toto hrozba, ked uz ziadne slovenske politicke strany to nemaju ako prioritu cislo 1 v svojich programoch

    Prezidentka Slovenskej republiky
    https://www.prezident.sk/article/prezidentka-sa-na-zempline-zaujima-o-dopady-sucha/
    LINKOS
    LINKOS --- ---
    TADEAS: čas vyřešit problém - upravit normy...
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    musime vam dat krmit

    Pesticid: nepřítel vody. Čtyři Češi ze sta pijí vodu, která nesplňuje normy | Hospodářské noviny (iHNed.cz)
    https://archiv.ihned.cz/c1-66770850-pesticid-nepritel-vody

    Přestože okolní krajina s poli a záhony zeleniny, sevřenými mezi Labe a Jizeru, vypadá malebně, voda ve vrtu je znečištěná koktejlem nejrůznějších pesticidů. Tedy chemikálií používaných na ochranu plodin před nejrůznějšími živočišnými či rostlinnými škůdci a plísněmi. Látky, které vylepšují úrodu, se spolu s dešťovou vodou postupně dostávají i do podzemních vod. Přesně to se stalo i ve Dvorcích. "Znečištění asi nepochází jen z blízkého pole s bramborami, ale z větší vzdálenosti, pohyb vody je tady velký," říká vedoucí odboru jakosti vody ČHMÚ Vít Kodeš.

    Laboratoře ve vodě z vrtu skutečně odhalily jak pesticidy používané na brambory, tak i chemikálie, kterými zemědělci ošetřují cukrovou řepu, řepku či kukuřici. Ty se přitom nyní v blízkém okolí nepěstují. Nalezené látky jsou většinou takzvané metabolity pesticidů, tedy produkty jejich rozpadu. "V podzemní vodě vydrží dlouho. Nejspíš se do ní dostaly před řadou let. Deset z nich je v koncentracích, které přesahují povolené množství, a jeden, metolachlor, dokonce šedesátinásobně," dodává expert.

    ...

    ty dosahující až do prvohorních, druhohorních a na Moravě i třetihorních vrstev hornin schopných vázat vodu. Pesticidy však už pronikly i sem. Například do vrtu v Libotově u Dvora Králové nad Labem, který dosahuje až ke dnu české křídové pánve.

    "Tady bylo nalezeno osm pesticidů a jejich metabolitů, suma jejich koncentrace byla devětkrát přes normu," říká Kodeš.

    Celková statistika expertů z ČHMÚ není pro české podzemní vody, jichž navíc kvůli několikaletému suchu ubývá, vůbec povzbudivá. Z hodnocení všech skoro sedmi stovek objektů za rok 2019 podle Kodeše vyplývá, že pesticidy se vyskytují ve více než polovině sond do podzemních vod. A ve čtyřech z deseti vrtů jich bylo víc, než připouští norma. Dusičnany a amonné ionty překročily limity ve více než deseti procentech objektů.

    Ještě vážnější varování přichází z vrtů, odkud se pitná voda běžně odebírá. Mezi sedmi sty pozorovacími je jich padesát. Více, než připouští norma pro podzemní vody, je pesticidy znečištěna skoro polovina − 48 procent. Ústav přitom vybral jen ty nejdůležitější, tedy zdroje velkého množství vody.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    BIG NEWS — Timberland is now a Frontier Founder in our Land to Market program, with a new collection of boots sourced from verified regenerative ranches coming Fall 2020.

    We’ve been hard at work with Timberland behind the scenes for some time now, coordinating with Thousand Hills Lifetime Grazed (the Savory Hub in Minnesota) who will provide them with leather hides sourced from their verified regenerative producer network.

    It’s a beautiful symbiosis between a regional meat supply company and a leather goods company, and the exact type of collaboration we hope to see more of in the future.

    Timberland & Savory Institute Partner to Build Regenerative Leather Supply Chain – Savory Institute
    https://savory.global/timberland/
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Will Floating Turbines Usher in a New Wave of Offshore Wind? - Yale E360
    https://e360.yale.edu/features/will-floating-turbines-usher-in-a-new-wave-of-offshore-wind

    “Floating wind power has enormous potential to be a core technology for reaching the climate goals in Europe and around the world,” says Frank Adam, an expert on wind energy technology at the University of Rostock in Germany.

    The ocean space beyond the reach of conventional offshore turbines makes up 80 percent of the world’s maritime waters, opening the way for floating arrays, Adam says. “In the past few years this technology has made great strides, and Hywind shows that it can work as a whole park,” says Adam. “Now the farms have to grow bigger to show governments and investors that they’re feasible on a really large scale.”

    Some renewable energy experts remain skeptical that the high costs of floating offshore wind turbines — currently the electricity they generate is often almost twice as expensive as near-shore wind turbines and three times that of land-based wind turbines — will come down far enough to rival other clean-energy technologies.

    “It will always be cheaper to build turbines on land, and that is where the [emissions-reduction] targets are going to have to be reached,” says R. Andreas Kraemer, founder and director emeritus of the Ecologic Institute, a Berlin-based think tank. “Even though the floating parks may be cheaper in some cases than fixed offshore wind power plants, and deployable over a larger sea area, it is still maritime engineering — and that makes it expensive to build, deploy, and maintain. Lifespans of the stations are short because of the corrosive nature of the marine environment.”

    ...

    But advocates of floating wind arrays note that the costs of onshore and near-shore wind energy have been steadily falling as the efficiency of these technologies has been rising; the same trends, they contend, are likely to lower the costs of floating offshore wind

    ...

    Po Wen Cheng, head of an international research project on floating wind energy at the University of Stuttgart, says that floating turbines could produce more energy than the largest onshore or offshore technologies. Not only are winds in deeper waters more powerful than those closer to shore, he says, but the physics of the flexible, suspended rigs enables them to carry larger turbines. “The bigger the turbine, the more energy they can produce in the right conditions,” he says. Cheng argues that floating turbines could be even taller than today’s largest offshore rigs, perhaps with 400-foot blades and towers stretching nearly 1,000 feet into the air — as tall as the Eiffel Tower. Turbines of such dimensions could generate three times the electricity of today’s most advanced onshore turbines, says Cheng.

    ...

    Investors and renewable energy companies say that the most formidable hurdle to full-scale rollout of floating wind arrays is recognition from governments, utilities, and financiers that the technology is viable and that costs will inevitably fall. “We need commitments from governments, the way France, Scotland, and Japan have done, to help get bigger floating parks off the ground,” says Bruno Geschier, chief sales and marketing officer of Ideol, a multinational offshore wind developer.

    ...

    the promise of harnessing so much of the open seas for renewable energy generation remains an enticing proposition. As the IEA has noted, in theory, offshore wind power alone could eventually meet the entire electricity needs of Europe, the U.S., and Japan many times over.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Only One Oil Major Is Betting Big On Renewable Energy | OilPrice.com
    https://oilprice.com/...ewable-Energy/Only-One-Oil-Major-Is-Betting-Big-On-Renewable-Energy.amp.html

    Equinor, the Norwegian state-controlled energy giant, will drive renewable investment among majors, spending $6.5 billion in the next three years to build its capital-intensive offshore wind portfolio. We do not expect this forecast to be heavily affected by the fluctuating oil price or capex cuts, as much of the company’s renewable portfolio is already committed, such as the massive Dogger Bank offshore wind project in the UK.

    If Equinor is removed from the outlook, however, renewable investments from major oil and gas companies can be seen in a very different light, declining over the next three years. This fall does not even factor in any of the recent capex cuts announced by the majors.

    “Recent suggestions of ‘resilient green strategies’ or ‘business as usual’ simply do not carry much weight, with the exception of Equinor. Not until later in the decade do we see an increase in renewable spending from other companies,” says Rystad Energy’s Product Manager for Renewables Gero Farruggio.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Through his music, acclaimed Italian composer and pianist Ludovico Einaudi has added his voice to those of eight million people from across the world demanding protection for the Arctic.
    Einaudi performed one of his own compositions on a floating platform in the middle of the Ocean, against the backdrop of the Wahlenbergbreen glacier (in Svalbard, Norway).

    Travelling on board Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise on the eve of a significant event for the future of the Arctic: this week's meeting of the OSPAR Commission, which could secure the first protected area in Arctic international waters.

    Ludovico Einaudi - "Elegy for the Arctic" - Official Live (Greenpeace)
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=2DLnhdnSUVs

    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Zelená dohoda pro Evropu :: Radim Tolasz
    http://m.tolasz.cz/news/zelena-dohoda-pro-evropu/

    Dohoda upozorňuje, že zemědělství spotřebovává zdroje, znečišťuje prostředí, snižuje biodiverzitu a přitom se velká část vyrobených potravin vyhodí (IPCC říká, že globálně až 30 %). Tlak na omezení používání chemických pesticidů, hnojiv a antibiotik půjde společně s podporou ochrany zemědělské produkce před škůdci a chorobami. Důležitá je podpora starosti o půdu, hospodaření s živinami a biologické rozmanitosti, včetně lesního hospodářství. Nejen zemědělství, ale i průmyslu se věnují části o toxických látkách. Měli bychom dosáhnout nulového znečištění, včetně nápravy „historických“ škod. Obnova přirozené funkce vody v krajině a co nejlepší kvalita ovzduší už jen dokresluje šíři této Dohody.

    Na první pohled se může zdát, že Evropská zelená dohoda je o klimatu a o financování snižování emisí. Ale není to pravda. Jen si konečně někdo uvědomil, že nežijeme v uzavřených bublinách kanceláří a jednacích sálů. Žijeme v krajině, která je odrazem měnícího se klimatu a našich „výrobních“ aktivit. Musíme se věnovat krajině v celé její šíři, od energetických emisí po toxické látky v krajině kolující. Není cestou odsunovat fosilní útlum někde za rok 2030, stejně jako nelze zavírat oči před vyplavováním toxických látek z půdy za povodní nebo při větrné erozi v suchých časech. Dohoda se věnuje samozřejmě i vědě a výzkumu, vzdělávání, ekonomice, ale i mimoevropské spolupráci (podrobně jsou rozebírány problémy Afriky).

    Řekl bych, že všichni kdo se řadíme do věkové kategorie 30+, 40+, 50+, ... jsme už podobných textů, na různá témata, viděli velké množství. I tento text je zcela standardní, politický, všeobjímající, chtělo by se napsat „manifest“. Je to v dnešní době text důležitý, protože si snad už všichni uvědomujeme, že je něco špatně, že musíme změnit své chování, jednání, zamýšlet se nad vlastní zranitelností a nevhodně nastavenými závislostmi. Ale je to jen „manifest“ – důležitější je, jak bude promítnut do rozhodovacích procesů na všech úrovních. Jak bude používán.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Jaderná hrozba pro demokracii: Dukovany a bezemisní zákon – A2larm
    https://a2larm.cz/2020/05/jaderna-hrozba-pro-demokracii-dukovany-a-bezemisni-zakon/

    Vláda ČR se chystá učinit zásadní rozhodnutí, které je v rozporu s českou ekologickou a ekonomickou bezpečností! Jde o ukázkový příklad toho, jak v praxi vypadá uchvácení státu soukromými zájmy, tedy o na míru šitou přípravu legislativního rámce způsobem, který vyhovuje konkrétním aktérům, mimo dohled občanské společnosti a v tomto případě dokonce i mimo dohled vládní opozice.

    Konkrétně jde o návrh MPO na financování výstavby nového bloku jaderné elektrárny v Dukovanech. Jak upozorňuje Hnutí Duha, návrh byl okleštěn o obvyklé připomínkové řízení, a MPO prosazuje jeho zrychlené projednání Poslaneckou sněmovnou. Již po pouhém první čtení, bez možnosti pozměňovacích návrhů a diskuse ve výborech tak může dojít k rozhodnutí, na které budou v budoucnosti čeští občané doplácet ze svých peněženek po mnoho desetiletí, a kromě toho riskovat i vlastní energetickou a ekologickou bezpečnost. Jaderné bloky jsou v dnešní době krokem zpátky do minulosti - do centralizovaného státu náchylného ke korupci, navíc s nesmírnou ekologickou zátěží a mnoha riziky spjatými tradičně s provozem podobných zařízení.

    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Competition for land: A sociometabolic perspective - ScienceDirect
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914003127

    The socioecological metabolism approach is a framework to analyze land-related limits and functions in particular with respect to production and consumption of biomass and carbon sequestration. It can generate databases that consistently link land used with biomass flows which are useful in understanding interlinkages between different products and services and thereby help to analyze systemic feedbacks in the global land system.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    COVID-19 exposes urgent need for regeneration, resilience in agriculture | Greenbiz
    https://www.greenbiz.com/article/covid-19-exposes-urgent-need-regeneration-resilience-agriculture

    General Mills, which has over 100 consumer brands ranging from Cheerios cereal to Gold Medal flour, has been digging its heels into regenerative agriculture practices and working with members of its supply chain — namely its farmers — to help reach its science-based target of reducing absolute greenhouse gas emissions by 28 percent across its value chain by 2025. The food company plans to advance regenerative practices on at least 1 million acres of land by 2030.

    Over half of the company’s carbon footprint and "transformation of usable ingredients" and 82 percent of its water footprint lie in its agricultural supply chain, making it a good place to seek improvements.

    "We’re advancing these activities but we’re about outcomes," said Jeff Hanratty, sustainability manager at General Mills during the webcast.

    He said the company is going after four outcomes — increasing economic resiliency, improving soil health, bettering water outcomes and improving above-ground biodiversity.

    Hanratty said General Mills is connecting farmers in its supply chain to experts who can help them adjust their practices to achieve these outcomes. Because the company is one of the largest oat purchasers in the food industry, it started two pilots with farmers who grow that commodity. Then it decided to work with farmers who grow wheat.

    In both instances, Hanratty said the farmers are working to figure out what they can do differently while General Mills is figuring out the most economical ways those operations can measure their impact as they scale their regenerative farming efforts.
    YEETKA
    YEETKA --- ---
    Stahlman joins Team Human to discuss how artificial intelligence has become the new ground for human interaction, and why navigating it will require us to retrieve our uniquely human senses. “We will only become fully human if we learn to take responsibility for our actions.” Stahlman says. Further, he discusses the shift from a television environment to a digital environment and what that means for our collective sensibilities.

    https://teamhuman.fm/episodes/ep-149-mark-stahlman-get-digital-go-medieval/
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The grand old trees of the world are dying, leaving forests younger and shorter
    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/.../05/grand-old-trees-are-dying-leaving-forests-younger-shorter/

    Pervasive shifts in forest dynamics in a changing world | Science
    https://science.sciencemag.org/content/368/6494/eaaz9463

    To paint the most detailed picture of global tree loss to date, nearly two dozen scientists from around the world examined more than 160 previous studies and combined their findings with satellite imagery. Their analysis reveals that from 1900 to 2015, the world lost more than a third of its old-growth forests.

    In places where historical data is the most detailed—particularly Canada, the western United States, and Europe—mortality rates have doubled in just the past four decades, and a higher proportion of those deaths are older trees.


    There is no single direct cause. Decades of logging and land clearing play a role, scientists say. But increasing temperatures and rising carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels have significantly magnified most other causes of tree death. From Israel’s eucalyptus and cypress plantations to Mongolia’s birch and larch stands, scientists are documenting longer and harsher droughts, more severe outbreaks of insects and disease, and increasingly catastrophic wildfires.

    “We will see fewer forests,” says Monica Turner, a forest ecologist at the University of Wisconsin. “There will be areas where there are forests now where there won’t be in the future.”


    ...

    In central Europe, for instance, “You don’t have to look for dead trees,” says Henrik Hartmann, with Germany's Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry. “They’re everywhere.”

    In one recent year, following a week of excessive heat, hundreds of thousands of beech trees dropped their leaves. Bark beetles are also killing spruce, which is not unusual. But hotter weather weakens trees, making them more vulnerable and allowing the insects to multiply and survive through winter into the next year.

    Even in colder regions, “You get a couple of hot years and the forests are suffering,” says Hartmann, who was not an author on McDowell’s study. “We’re approaching a situation where the forests cannot acclimate. There are individual species that are being driven beyond the threshold of what they can handle.”

    ...

    McDowell and several colleagues began pondering how tree loss would alter forests’ ability to sequester CO2—and how to better predict such devastation in the future. A decade later, a co-worker examined tree rings and past temperature swings and found a relationship between heat and tree deaths. Then he simulated how the forest would change based on temperature projections from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The results suggested that by 2050, normal temperatures in the Southwest could be similar to rare past heat waves that led to severe tree-killing droughts. “That was really frightening,” McDowell says.

    McDowell and other scientists began to look more broadly. Many people had assumed rising CO2 would feed tree growth. But as the planet gets hotter, the atmosphere sucks moisture from plants and animals. Trees respond by shedding leaves or closing their pores to retain moisture. Both of those reactions curtail CO2 uptake. It’s like “going to an all-you-can-eat buffet with duct tape over their mouths,” McDowell says.

    In a tropical forest, the vast majority of tree mass can be in the top one percent of the largest trees. “These big old trees disproportionately hold the above-ground carbon storage,” says study co-author Craig D. Allen, a forest ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. “When they die, it creates space for smaller trees, but they have much less carbon in them.”

    That’s important, because most global carbon models used by the IPCC assume that forests will do far more to offset our fossil fuel use. The reality may be far less clear.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    54. minuta - planetarita
    1:01:30 - klima

    Yanis Varoufakis l Cambridge Union Online
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yi4TNvyNQo
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    Have Banks Become Climate Advocates? Interpreting Shareholder Votes And Lending Policies Regarding The Fossil Fuel Sector
    https://www.forbes.com/...areholder-votes-and-lending-policies-regarding-the-fossil-fuel-sector/amp/

    BlackRock is the largest asset manager in the world, controlling about $7 trillion (if it were a country, it would be the third largest economy behind the US and China). In January 2020, Larry Fink, BlackRock's CEO, dropped a bombshell in his annual letter. Fink declared that environmental sustainability will now be at the center of BlackRock's investment strategy. He also promised that BlackRock would deploy its shareholder power to push companies to act on climate change.

    In Exxon's annual meeting,  BlackRock voted against the reelection of two outside directors, Angela Braly and Kenneth Frazier, to express unhappiness over Exxon’s climate risk disclosures.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    It Will Get Darker Before the Dawn - Resilience
    https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-05-27/it-will-get-darker-before-the-dawn/


    The collapse of the fossil fuel industry – good for climate action but bad for geopolitical stability 10 – has long been understood as a systemic financial risk. The pandemic may have just triggered it 11, leading not just to economic losses but major global power shifts.

    The pandemic has highlighted inherent structural weaknesses in some of the worlds largest economies, but none more so than the US. Their weak response to the pandemic combined with inequality will likely tip the US into depression 12 – or worse. Social commentator Umair Haque describes the current state of the US as “A nation in which income, savings, life expectancy, happiness, trust are all in free-fall. This is the stuff of epic social collapse”. I think he’s right. The collapse we’re witnessing will likely lead to violent civil unrest and political chaos – but certainly to ugly polarisation and instability, manufactured trade conflicts, nationalism and protectionism.
    Just those two examples, happening on top of the renewable energy and electrified transport revolution already underway, will precipitate massive global shifts in political and economic power – not just from the US to China but more broadly – with far reaching implications 13. As argued by the Bank of America report, it could lead to “….some of the largest shifts in power ever seen in modern economic history.” The US will be an empire in decline, with all the risks that entails.

    ...

    The only way to avoid them is to force a collective recognition amongst policy makers and the business community as to what this is really about. We have a system problem and unless we address it in a systems way, we will fail.

    Will we do so? Or will we launch some token version of a “Green New Deal” programme, add on a slightly stronger social safety net and call it a revolution? Will we use this opportunity – or will we just apply unfocused monetary policy – basically spend lots of money – still deluded that we can restart the economy as it was?

    History is brutal teacher on this topic. As we have seen with COVID 19, it’s only when an existential crisis hits – with direct and immediate impact – that we then embark on truly dramatic change. Will this crisis be enough to trigger a broader understanding of, and appropriate reaction to, the greater systemic crisis?

    The evidence so far is probably not. Not until things get worse. A lot worse. It may or may not be a synchronised global depression, and it may not be global collapse, but it will be very bad, and it will last for a long time.

    ...

    first we have to decide to change.

    This is about choice, not about our capacity to deliver. Each and every ‘black elephant’ is fixable – if we act in time. We have the technology, the financial capacity, the intellect, the humanity and a visceral instinct to survive. But if I dwell on that potential here, I risk triggering your optimism bias and the opportunity for denial.


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