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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day


    "Given the sheer enormity of climate change, it’s okay to be depressed, to grieve. But please, don’t stay there too long. Join me in pure, unadulterated, righteous anger."


    "I don’t want your hope. I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. And then I want you to act. Once you start to act, the hope is everywhere."

    "Our best scientists tell us insistently that a calamity is unfolding, that the life-support systems of the Earth are being damaged in ways that threaten our survival. Yet in the face of these facts we carry on as usual."

    “We’ve got to stop burning fossil fuels. So many aspects of life depend on fossil fuels, except for music and love and education and happiness. These things, which hardly use fossil fuels, are what we must focus on.”

    A nejde o to, že na to nemáme dostatečné technologie, ty by na řešení použít šly, ale chybí nám vůle a představivost je využít. Zůstáváme při zemi, přemýšlíme až moc rezervovaně. Technologický pokrok to sám o sobě nevyřeší. Problém jsme my, ne technologické nástroje.

    Rostouci hladiny oceanu, zmena atmosferickeho proudeni, zmeny v distribuci srazek a sucha. Zmeny karbonoveho, fosforoveho a dusikoveho cyklu, okyselovani oceanu. Jake jsou bezpecnostni rizika a jake potencialni klady dramatickych zmen fungovani zemskeho systemu?
    Ale take jak funguji masove dezinformacni kampane ropneho prumyslu a boj o verejne mineni na prahu noveho klimatickeho rezimu post-holocenu.
    rozbalit záhlaví
    PALEONTOLOG
    PALEONTOLOG --- ---
    YMLADRIS: na pohary z novejch teplotnich rekordu uz neni v policce misto
    YMLADRIS
    YMLADRIS --- ---
    furt dokola ten ač že by taky někdy napsal neco novyho



    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Michaela Pixová
    Michaela Pixová - Tak toto mě dnes skutečně pobavilo.... | Facebook
    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10158226098824220&id=676324219


    ‼️‼️‼️ Ochrana klimatu zdá se mít nečekaného, ale potenciálně velmi významného spojence! Jiří X Doležal z Reflexu, neochvějný obhájce volného trhu a oponent všeho progresivního a levicového, pochopil, že se mu milovaná příroda mění přímo před očima. A je z toho velmi znepokojen. Ve svém článku, který si bere na paškál klimaskeptiky s Václavem Klausem v čele, píše tónem, který by sám ještě před pár lety označil za alarmistický či hysterický:

    "Pokud naše civilizace okamžitě nezačne něco velmi účinného dělat k nápravě svého negativního působení na klima, končíme. Klimatický rozvrat probíhá právě nyní a zcela očividně i v naší zemi."

    Z článku je patrné značné úsilí Jiřího X Doležala zachovat si ve svém osobním světovém paradigmatu alespoň elementární konzistenci. V úvodu článku neváhá dštít síru proti snahám ekologů regulovat kapitalismus, ale hned na jeho konci pro změnu obhajuje volný trh, který kdyby správně fungoval, byly by v něm zpeněženy negativní externality spočívající v ničení přírody nás všech. Cožpak Jiří X Doležal nechápe, že právě to jsou ty regulace, totiž zavádění emisních povolenek, či uhlíkové daně, kterou "ekologisti" požadují? Namísto toho autor překvapivého článku neváhá fosilní korporace přirovnávat ke komunistům, či ke kapitalismu putinovského typu. Jakkoliv bychom si zajisté s kritikou fosilních miliardářů rovněž nebrali žádné servítky, nutno dodat, že nejhorší fosilní korporace pochází zejména ze zemí, jako jsou USA, kde volnému trhu opravdu v cestě mnoho nestojí. Doležal uvádí v článku příklad hospody, kde byt nad hospodou má kvůli negativním externalitám z hospodského provozu levnější nájem. Jenomže kdo by měl ty externatlily fosilnímu průmyslu působící devastaci přírody vlastně naúčtovat? Kdo je tím, kdo vlastní nájemní smlouvu na klima a ekosystémy, a měl by od uhlobaronů a ropných magnátů žádat kompenzace? Nejsme to náhodou my všichni, obyvatelé Země?A nejsou to náhodou právě ekologové a klimatické hnutí, kdo hlasitě křičí, že se ničení životního prostředí nesmí firmám vyplatit?

    Přesto musíme Jiřímu X Doležalovi opravdu poděkovat za to, že ze své pozice dokáže i konzervativnímu čtenáři a snad i některým klimaskeptikům skelníkový efekt přiblížit možná líp, než samotný Radim Tolasz. Pobavil zejména těmito výroky:

    "Bez oteplení zaviněného CO2 by tedy nevznikli ani trilobiti, ani dinosauři, ani Václav Klaus."

    "I my jsme měli před začátkem průmyslové revoluce 280 ppm uhlíku v atmosféře. Ještě před pár stovkami let. Pak si ale lidstvo postavilo opravdu impozantní množství komínů, a dnes jsme na hodnotě 414 ppm. Nejvíce za poslední miliony let. A tomu odpovídá a bude odpovídat reakce klimatu a ekosystémů, jak se v minulosti stalo vždy. Pokud lidská rasa nepodnikne zásadní kroky k omezení emisí CO2, skončíme jako savci v permu."

    Nezbývá doufat, že Jiří X Doležal bude ve svém samostudiu klimatologie, paleoekologie a geologie pokračovat, a že časem dojde i na to, že nejsme jeho nepřátelé, ale spojenci. Že jsme to právě my, kdo bojuje i za jeho Brdy!

    Jiří X. Doležal: Klimaskepticismus? Útok na kapitalismus volné soutěže – Forum24
    https://www.forum24.cz/jiri-x-dolezal-klimaskepticismus-utok-na-kapitalismus-volne-souteze/
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Climate change faces us with yet another in a long line of actual or potential disasters that have occurred over the last century. One powerful and recurring response to such events frames them as catastrophe from which either physical or spiritual escape is imagined. This article attempts a psycho-social analysis of this apocalyptic response to actual or imagined disasters and traces two variants of this response – the redemptive and the survivalist. Whilst such responses appear radical, I argue that they are essentially a defence in the face of despair that has already found expression within climate change science and activism. In contrast, I suggest that what is required is a realistic response to the possibility of climatic disaster, a possibility the probability of which cannot be known. The quandary we face is how to sound the alarm without being alarmist.

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/pcs.2011.1
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Why we can’t count on carbon-sucking farms to slow climate change
    https://www.technologyreview.com/...hy-we-cant-count-on-carbon-sucking-farms-to-slow-climate-change/

    The world’s farmlands do have the capacity to store billions of tons of carbon dioxide in the soil annually, according to a National Academies report last year. But there is still uncertainty concerning which farming techniques work, and to what degree, across different soil types, depths, topographies, crop varieties, climate conditions, and time periods.

    It’s unclear whether the practices can be carried out over long periods and on a massive scale across the world’s farms without undercutting food production. And there are significant disagreements about what it will take to accurately measure and certify that farms are actually removing and storing increased amounts of carbon dioxide.

    These uncertainties further complicate the well-documented challenges in setting up any reliable carbon offsets program. Studies have frequently found these systems can substantially overestimate reductions, as economic, environmental and political pressures all push toward issuing large numbers of offsets credits. The programs can also create opportunities for gamesmanship and greenwashing that undermine real progress on climate change, observers say.

    As Climate Action Reserve looks to ramp up the use of these credits, some fear the group is on the verge of creating a standard that may well invite such behavior.

    ...

    The basic idea behind carbon farming, or regenerative agriculture, is that photosynthesis acts as a greenhouse gas pump, pulling CO2 from the air and converting it into sugars stored in leaves, stalks, and roots or excreted into soil. The hope is that farmers can increase the amount of carbon that is left behind in the fields, through practices like planting cover crops between harvests, and drilling seeds instead of continually upturning the soil through tilling.

    But the process playing out in California highlights the challenges of establishing reliable standards that can be broadly applied. Such standards certify that the farmers getting paid to carry out the practices are in fact decreasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, lending confidence to people or businesses looking to purchase credits.

    They’re essential to making offsets work, but hard to get right. Climate Action Reserve, which created the protocols that California largely adopted for the nation’s largest cap-and-trade program, released a draft “soil enrichment protocol” for public comment in April. It was scheduled to bring the standard before its board for a vote this month. But last week, the nonprofit announced a second public comment period after receiving numerous responses, several of which questioned whether the protocol will accurately measure additional levels of carbon uptake.

    ...

    The issue is that much of the soil carbon research to date finds that carbon uptake differs widely across soil types and other conditions, not just from region to region, but from plot to plot. So it’s difficult to develop any model “that can account for this inherent variability,” and requires them all to be rigorously tested and reviewed, says Jane Zelikova, chief scientist at the Carbon180 think tank, who also signed the letter. She argues that any modeling must be supplemented with thorough and randomized soil sampling, across fields, at varying depths and over time.

    ...

    The better approach could simply be to pay farmers directly to carry out practices to improve soil health and reduce environmental impacts, while thinking of any additional carbon storage as a welcome co-benefit–but not one that’s strictly relied upon to balance out another organization’s greenhouse gas pollution.

    “Trying to precisely quantify carbon offsets is almost an impossibly hard problem and one where the deck is stacked against quality outcomes,” says Danny Cullenward, a lecturer at Stanford Law School and policy director of CarbonPlan. “I find it hard to believe we’re going to do a perfect job on this. But that’s what offsets require, because they allow higher emissions elsewhere.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The world's major food baskets will experience more extreme droughts than previously forecast as greenhouse gases rise
    https://www.smh.com.au/...-global-hot-spots-as-droughts-worsen-in-warming-world-20200601-p54ydh.html

    Robust future changes in meteorological drought in CMIP6 projections despite uncertainty in precipitation
    https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2020GL087820?af=R

    “Australia is one of the hot spots along with the Amazon and the Mediterranean, especially,” said Anna Ukkola, a research fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes and lead author of the paper published in Geophysical Research Letters.

    For southern Australia, the shift to longer, more frequent and more intense droughts up to 2100 will be due to greater variability in rainfall rather than a reduction in average rainfall. For the Amazon, both mean rain and variability changes.

    The researchers applied the sixth generation of the so-called Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6), which will underpin the IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report due for release in a series from April. The latest iteration benefited from five years more observations which were used for comparison and to refine processes.

    The models simulated a so-called "middle of the road" scenario for greenhouse gas emissions against a high emissions "fossil-fuelled development" one. Under the latter trajectory, average droughts would double in length from two to four months by 2100 compared with the 1950-2014 period.

    “For regions that have quite a lot of agriculture [such as North America and parts of China and Europe], the models suggest they will have more intense droughts in the future even though they may not experience changes in mean rainfall," Dr Ukkola said. “We don’t see any regions where intensity will decrease in the models."
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    YMLADRIS:

    Sixth mass extinction of wildlife accelerating, scientists warn | Environment | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/...jun/01/sixth-mass-extinction-of-wildlife-accelerating-scientists-warn
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Prof. Michael Sterner's interview with Prof. John Schellnhuber
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=4PTRTwn3wrg&feature=youtu.be
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    ‘Collapse of civilisation is the most likely outcome’: top climate scientists – Voice of Action
    https://voiceofaction.org/...apse-of-civilisation-is-the-most-likely-outcome-top-climate-scientists/

    “Given the momentum in both the Earth and human systems, and the growing difference between the ‘reaction time’ needed to steer humanity towards a more sustainable future, and the ‘intervention time’ left to avert a range of catastrophes in both the physical climate system (e.g., melting of Arctic sea ice) and the biosphere (e.g., loss of the Great Barrier Reef), we are already deep into the trajectory towards collapse,” said Steffen.

    “That is, the intervention time we have left has, in many cases, shrunk to levels that are shorter than the time it would take to transition to a more sustainable system.

    “The fact that many of the features of the Earth System that are being damaged or lost constitute ‘tipping points’ that could well link to form a ‘tipping cascade’ raises the ultimate question: Have we already lost control of the system? Is collapse now inevitable?”

    This is not a unique view – leading Stanford University biologists, who were first to reveal that we are already experiencing the sixth mass extinction on Earth, released new research this week showing species extinctions are accelerating in an unprecedented manner, which may be a tipping point for the collapse of human civilisation.

    Also in the past week research emerged showing the world’s major food baskets will experience more extreme droughts than previously forecast, with southern Australia among the worst hit globally.

    ...

    Steffen told Voice of Action that the three main challenges to humanity – climate change, the degradation of the biosphere and the growing inequalities between and among countries – were “just different facets of the same fundamental problem”.

    This problem was the “neoliberal economic system” that spread across the world through globalisation, underpinning “high production high consumption lifestyles” and a “religion built not around eternal life but around eternal growth”.

    “It is becoming abundantly clear that (i) this system is incompatible with a well-functioning Earth System at the planetary level; (ii) this system is eroding human- and societal-well being, even in the wealthiest countries, and (iii) collapse is the most likely outcome of the present trajectory of the current system, as prophetically modelled in 1972 in the Limits to Growth work,” Steffen told Voice of Action.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    DZODZO
    DZODZO --- ---
    KEB: vyzera ze hlavne ucinnost je nizsia, pri horizontalnej zaberaju vsetky listy vrtule, pri vertikalnej iba ten do ktoreho zrovna narazil vietor a ostatne sa iba vezu

    Vertical-axis wind turbines: what makes them better? - Windpower Engineering
    https://www.windpowerengineering.com/vertical-axis-wind-turbines/
    KEB
    KEB --- ---
    TUHO: Mě zaujalo tohle

    The Bluenergy solar wind turbine
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qD_d78SLis


    nevítě někdo proč se vetikální větr elektrárny nestaví? Proč dominují klasické větráky?
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Trump Is Bailing Out Big Meat—and Further Screwing the Planet
    https://newrepublic.com/article/157913/trump-bailing-big-meatand-screwing-planet

    critics who track the U.S. agricultural industry’s massive environmental footprint, the produce stage props seemed disingenuous: The stimulus will prop up a U.S. agricultural system in which more than two-thirds of crops become animal feed. The ultimate winners will be industrial meat companies like Cargill and Tyson. That’s disastrous news for the climate.

    In 2018, watchdog groups GRAIN and the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy estimated that the world’s top five industrial meat and dairy companies—JBS, Tyson Foods, Cargill, Dairy Farmers of America, and Fonterra—were together releasing more emissions than fossil fuel companies like Exxon. Factory farms have contributed to a 14.4 percent spike in climate-destabilizing U.S. methane emissions since 1990, EPA calculations suggest, while at the same time leaking tens of millions of tons of raw sewage into the country’s waterways. And that’s before you get to their other potential public health issues.

    ...

    Much of this pollution can be traced back to a small group of powerful businesses such as Cargill, which is the largest privately held company in the United States, bigger even than Koch Industries. “They run agriculture,” Patty Lovera, a policy adviser for the Campaign for Family Farms and the Environment, told me, referring to the factory-farming giants. “They run the supply chain.” And the current stimulus contains no provisions for changing that. “Overall, it’s more subsidies to lock in the meat-based U.S. agriculture system,” said Glenn Hurowitz, executive director of the Washington, D.C.–based environmental watchdog group Mighty Earth. “That could be locking in polluting practices for much longer.”

    ...

    a recurring pattern under the Trump administration: play up the optics of supporting small farmers while mostly assisting atmosphere-warming corporations. That’s what happened with the $28 billion program announced in May 2019 to mitigate the impact of Trump’s trade wars. “What was meant to be a financial lifeline for struggling farmers,” The New York Times reported in February, “has been widely derided by critics as a corporate bailout for big agriculture companies and those who live in metropolitan areas but own farms in rural America.”

    One of the larger beneficiaries of that trade war bailout has been the U.S. subsidiary of JBS, which received $67 million


    The Brazil-based company is the largest meat-processing firm on the planet. The annual emissions linked to its business model—which relies on suppliers clear-cutting sections of the Amazon rain forest for cattle grazing—amount to 280 megatons of greenhouse gases, according to 2017 calculations from the Climate Accountability Institute.

    Factory-farming meat giants have largely avoided the climate scrutiny given to oil and gas companies. “I think agriculture is a huge blind spot for the climate community,” Hurowitz said. “We need to decarbonize energy, don’t get me wrong, but acting on agriculture is at least as urgent.”

    ...

    “These companies depend on cheap corn and soy,” Lovera told me. “If there wasn’t [federal support] to prop up farmers to return next year and overproduce corn and soy cheaply again that could be disruptive.”

    And this in turn perpetuates a highly destructive agricultural system. Squeezing thousands of animals into small spaces on factory farms means creating massive manure-storing lagoons. The expansion of this model is one reason why U.S. manure-related emissions have grown 66 percent since 1990. Ironically, farmers are already feeling the effects of climate change, including hundreds of millions of dollars in uninsured crop losses from record Midwestern flooding last year.

    TADEAS:
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The Energy 202: Two GOP senators join with Democrats to back bill to help cut emissions from farms
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/...ck-bill-to-help-cut-emissions-from-farms/5ed7e6d5602ff12947e83432/

    The new bill, called the Growing Climate Solutions Act, would give farmers a leg up in selling credits into those markets by planting trees, restoring wetlands or using fertilizer more efficiently on their properties — all of which help cut the amount of carbon dioxide, methane and other climate-warming pollution emitted from their fields. Forest managers, similarly, can sequester carbon by letting more trees grow to maturity rather than regularly cutting them down.

    The senators want to set up a certification program at the Department of Agriculture to sign off on experts whom farmers can turn to for advice about reducing emissions. Such a program, along with a new USDA website called for in the bill, would give farmers the confidence to start cutting emissions and know they can participate in the carbon markets, the lawmakers say.

    “Something like this where they can be rewarded for their good stewardship just comes at a wonderful time,” said Braun, who noted farmers are facing hardship now due to low prices during the coronavirus pandemic.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS: Terraform Series & Desert Webinars

    10 Keys to Greening the Desert with Neal Spackman
    https://youtube.com/watch?list=PLeFwA7tn2i5qnhOIUlJEkHxEBNH2aq4dk&v=HW6GYcMXpGw
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Double-sided solar panels plus sun-tracking yield big returns | Anthropocene
    https://anthropocenemagazine.org/...most-efficient-cost-effective-way-to-capture-the-sun/?no_cache=1
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Mýty a fakta o klimatické krizi (2020)
    Autoři: Bedřich Moldan a Michaela Pixová
    Klimatická koalice a pražská kancelář Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung

    dl brozury: https://bit.ly/2UJeaIe
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Fridays for Future Europe Calls for Transforming Agricultural Policy to Tackle the Climate Crisis | Common Dreams News
    https://www.commondreams.org/...-europe-calls-transforming-agricultural-policy-tackle-climate-crisis

    FFF Europe: Offenen Brief zur Agrarpolitik
    https://www.die-stadtredaktion.de/...0/05/rubriken/umwelt/fff-europe-offenen-brief-zur-agrarpolitik/

    "Public money needs to flow into the transition to sustainable, climate-friendly and peasant agriculture. What we need is a new, evidence-based, and just CAP."

    ...

    Halving production and consumption of animal products could reduce emissions up to 40%. Emissions could be rapidly reduced by restoring our peatlands and soils. Negative emissions could be produced due to carbon fixation within our soils, as the Food and Agriculture Organization makes clear: 'the soil is our hidden ally' in tackling the climate crises. Agroecology and stopping pollution by pesticides can restore biodiversity. And above all, a regional, fair, and livelihood securing agriculture will tackle injustice and deliver a future perspective for farming. To support the key role of our farmers for the climate and our society we must encourage them with financial guidelines for emissions reduction, biodiversity recovery, and soil carbon fixation in the CAP funds.

    ...

    E.U. politicians must now deliver the transition and help our farmers and nature. It is not too late. It is time to act now," the letter adds. "E.U. politicians must recognize that a great hope to combat the climate crisis and the collapse of biodiversity lies in agriculture and that the current CAP is on the verge of destroying it."
    DRSH
    DRSH --- ---
    Ministr životního prostředí Richard Brabec /ANO/: Muselo by prš...
    https://talk.youradio.cz/...elo-by-prset-minimalne-dva-mesice-aby-se-vyrovnal-deficit-podzemnich-vod
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    Nikola orders enough electrolysis equipment from Nel to produce 40,000 kg of hydrogen per day - Green Car Congress
    https://www.greencarcongress.com/2020/06/20200604-nikola.html
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