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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    Can A New Kind Of Capitalism Effectively Confront The Climate Crisis?
    https://cleantechnica.com/...0/can-a-new-kind-of-capitalism-effectively-confront-the-climate-crisis/

    McAfee is a principal research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who focuses on digital transformation. He says that today’s environmental degradation and growing inequality, which were originally grounded in colonialism, can be held in check by what he calls the “four horsemen of the optimist,” namely:

    - capitalism
    - technological progress
    - public awareness
    - responsive government

    He says we can’t let one of these “horsemen” overpower the others. If it is in capitalism’s nature to increase inequality, then a responsive government should reign in that excess. If capitalists have incentives to shape regulations to maximize their profits, the government should legislate in ways that ensure equity for all.
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    s dovolenim si odlozim argumenty k realnosti oteplovani pro neverici

    https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/global-warming/temperature-change
    800.000 let vzorek, prokazana korelace co2 a teploty. lepsi dukaz uz byt nemuze

    Earth's CO2 Home Page
    https://www.co2.earth/
    aktualni co2 koncentrace, jen za poslednich 12 let vzestup o 50%. Aktualne o 30% nad 800.000 letym prumerem .)
    PER2
    PER2 --- ---
    GOJATLA
    GOJATLA --- ---
    Humans exploiting and destroying nature on unprecedented scale – report | Environment | The Guardian
    https://amp.theguardian.com/...ns-exploiting-and-destroying-nature-on-unprecedented-scale-report-aoe

    Robin Freeman, who led the research at ZSL, said: “It seems that we’ve spent 10 to 20 years talking about these declines and not really managed to do anything about it. It frustrates me and upsets me. We sit at our desks and compile these statistics but they have real-life implications. It’s really hard to communicate how dramatic some of these declines are.”

    Tanya Steele, chief executive at WWF, said: “We are wiping wildlife from the face of the planet, burning our forests, polluting and over-fishing our seas and destroying wild areas. We are wrecking our world – the one place we call home – risking our health, security and survival here on Earth.”

    Mike Barrett, executive director of conservation and science at WWF, said: “Urgent and immediate action is necessary in the food and agriculture sector. All the indicators of biodiversity loss are heading the wrong way rapidly. As a start, there has got to be regulation to get deforestation out of our supply chain straight away. That’s absolutely vital.”
    OMNIHASH
    OMNIHASH --- ---
    LINKOS: tak ignorovat hladinu oceánu jde z Děčína podstatně jednodušejc, než z nějaký aluviální pláně, co byla pod vodou ani ne pět set let zpátky.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Gaianism:

    i. restoring planetary homeostasis is the only valid strategic goal of any state actor for the foreseeable future

    ii. the scientific basis for how to carry out i. is complete

    iii. states and their constitutions must replatform around i. and ii.

    Last chance, humans!

    - https://twitter.com/mylesbyrne

    (+ ekosystemova regenerace)
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Living Planet Report 2020 | Official Site | WWF
    https://livingplanet.panda.org/en-us/

    Animal Populations Fell by 68% in 50 Years and It’s Getting Worse
    https://www.bloomberg.com/...e-change-and-food-businesses-are-driving-environmental-failure-globally

    The world is losing its mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish, and with them, the security of ecosystems that have supported humanity since it first emerged.

    That’s the conclusion of the Living Planet Report 2020, a biannual assessment by World Wildlife Fund and the Zoological Society of London, which records the decline in vertebrate life. This year’s report, released Wednesday, shows that these animal communities shrunk on average 68% between 1970 and 2016. Parts of the world are much worse off. The tropical Americas have seen animal populations decline 94% in the same period. The size of observed animal communities in or near freshwater globally have fallen by 84%.

    The authors put half the blame on changes to how we use land and the sea, citing such things as clearing ecologically important forest and freshwater use. Overfishing and hunting, invasive species, pollution and climate change round out the main causes of the global animal population crash.

    The report delivers a tough overall message. It suggests that continued human abuse of the planet may lead to collapse of the very natural systems and resources that allowed global civilization and modern societies to persist in the first place. And, they say, humanity is demonstrably to blame, and the damage is unprecedented in speed and vastness within human history.
    LINKOS
    LINKOS --- ---
    OMNIHASH: nejjednodušší řešení problémů je dělat, že o něm nevíš.
    OMNIHASH
    OMNIHASH --- ---
    TADEAS: v tomhle brity fakt obdivuju, žádná realita jim plány kazit nebude. Že na globální oteplní nevěřej lidi v čechách, kde vyměníme smrky za borovice, ok. Ale že ho ignorujou na ostrově, kde třetina obyvatelstva bydlí doslova metry nad mořem ve vysušenejch bažinách, tomu říkám mít koule.
    DZODZO
    DZODZO --- ---
    YMLADRIS: skoda ze je to zamkle, toto by ma zaujimalo :)
    YMLADRIS
    YMLADRIS --- ---
    Rising CO2 levels mean trees increasingly live fast and die young | New Scientist
    https://www.newscientist.com/...8-rising-co2-levels-mean-trees-increasingly-live-fast-and-die-young/
    YMLADRIS
    YMLADRIS --- ---
    Earth may temporarily pass dangerous 1.5 C warming limit by 2024, major new report says
    https://phys.org/news/2020-09-earth-temporarily-dangerous-limit-major.html

    jsou už vypsany nějaký kurzový sázky? že bysme si mohli vsadit
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    As Historic Heatwaves Cook California, Tesla Activates Its Distributed Army To Save The Grid
    https://cleantechnica.com/...-cook-california-tesla-activates-its-distributed-army-to-save-the-grid/

    Powerwall: During the heatwave, Tesla emailed Powerwall owners across the state with guidance about how to change the operating mode to optimize the Powerwall and accompanying rooftop solar systems (if applicable) to the Time of Use setting. In this mode, the Powerwall does everything it can to minimize the amount of power pulled from the grid during peak periods.

    ...

    Turning a home from a consumer to an on demand generator is a massive shift in how individual homes respond to and are impacted by grid strain events. A single home responding this way is neat. A neighborhood transforming from net consumers to net generators is impactful. Scaling intelligent, connected solar-plus-storage installations across a city, a region, a state, or a country changes how the grid works.

    Tesla’s ability to remotely activate and communicate to thousands of users based on geographical location, acts of god, weather forecasts, and current hardware state is a powerful tool that gives us a look into the future of the electrical grid. Electricity customers are increasingly transforming into microgrid managers.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---

    Climate crisis could displace 1.2bn people by 2050, report warns | Climate change | The Guardian
    https://amp.theguardian.com/...sep/09/climate-crisis-could-displace-12bn-people-by-2050-report-warns

    Ecological Threat Register – Vision of Humanity
    http://visionofhumanity.org/indexes/ecological-threat-register/

    The Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), a thinktank that produces annual global terrorism and peace indexes, said 1.2 billion people lived in 31 countries that are not sufficiently resilient to withstand ecological threats.

    “This will have huge social and political impacts, not just in the developing world, but also in the developed, as mass displacement will lead to larger refugee flows to the most developed countries,” Steve Killelea, the institute’s founder, said.

    ...

    The study uses United Nations and other data to assess 157 countries’ exposure to eight ecological threats, then assesses their capacity to withstand them. It found that 141 countries faced at least one ecological threat by 2050, with sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa the regions facing the largest number.

    Some countries, such as India and China, are most threatened by water scarcity, it concluded, while others such as Pakistan, Iran, Kenya, Mozambique and Madagascar face a combination of threats and a growing incapacity to deal with them.

    “Lack of resilience will lead to worsening food insecurity and competition over resources, increasing civil unrest and mass displacement,” the report said.

    It judged Pakistan to be the country with the largest number of people at risk of mass migration, followed by Ethiopia and Iran, adding that in such countries “even small ecological threats and natural disasters could result in mass population displacement”.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Where has the extra energy accumulated in the Earth system (1971–2018):
    → Ocean: 89%
    ⟶ Upper (0–700m): 52%
    ⟶ Intermediate (700–2000m): 28%
    ⟶ Deep (>2000m): 9%
    → Land: 6%
    → Cryosphere melting: 4%
    → Atmosphere (low heat capacity): 1%

    ESSD - Heat stored in the Earth system: where does the energy go?
    https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/12/2013/2020/

    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The Sociology of Climate Change as a Sociology of Loss | European Journal of Sociology / Archives Européennes de Sociologie | Cambridge Core
    https://www.cambridge.org/...-climate-change-as-a-sociology-of-loss/B16D58EC8D7F9AEE3227A35F4A9A5E20

    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    For covid, what we see is two weeks in the past. For climate, we live two decades in the past (where lots of folks wanna return to anyway, so on the surface that sounds like good news—until we realize we need to govern decades to centuries *ahead.* https://t.co/NM4dGz2ah8
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Nobel prize-winning economics of climate change is misleading and dangerous – here's why
    https://theconversation.com/...nomics-of-climate-change-is-misleading-and-dangerous-heres-why-145567

    TADEAS, TUHO:
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    2020 Past world economic production constrains current energy demands: Persistent scaling with implications for economic growth and climate change mitigation
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7451548/

    This article identifies a persistent relationship between global energy consumption and cumulative economic production. It implies that a surprisingly simple description of the human system is sufficient to explain past global trends and make robust projections of the aggregated world economy and its waste products. Humanity grows when more energy is available than it requires for its daily needs. Then work can be done not just for sustenance but for expansion. Because current sustenance demands emerge from past growth, inertia plays a much more important role in determining future societal and climate trajectories than has been generally acknowledged, particularly in the physically unconstrained models that are widely used to link the economy to climate [46, 47]. We have accumulated over history a long series of innovations in efficiency that continue to propel us forward. Without forgetting these advances, we will maintain a continued ability to expand our interface with the primary resources we consume.

    ...

    Eventually, of course, the interwoven networks of civilization will unravel and emissions will decline, whether it is through depletion of resources, environmentally forced decay or—as demonstrated recently—pandemics [48]. But the cuts will have to be deep, continuous, and cumulative to overcome the tremendous accumulated growth we have sustained up to this point.

    The formulations presented here are intended to help constrain the problem by reducing the number of available targets that can reasonably be expected to lead to avoidance of extreme climate change. Notably, gains in energy efficiency play a critical role in enabling increases in population and prosperity, and in turn growth of energy demands and carbon dioxide emissions, contrary to what would reasonably be assumed if civilization did not grow [33, 49, 50]. What seems to be required is a peculiar dance between reducing the production efficiency of civilization while simultaneously innovating new technologies that move us away from combustion.

    ...



    For example, Fig 4 shows that stabilizing concentrations at a nominal value of 350 ppm would require that the current world cumulative production shrink by two thirds to a value not seen since 1960.

    It is probably safe to assume that civilization will not willingly engage in such drastic pruning. Looking to the future, Fig 4 shows that without rapid decarbonization, we have already committed ourselves to CO2 concentrations above 500 ppmv, well in excess of the 450 ppmv threshold that has been deemed “dangerous” [44]. At current growth rates, the commitment is to a doubling of pre-industrial levels by 2030, and to eventual levels close to 650 ppmv by 2040.

    It should also be noted that CO2 uptake is not in fact linear over timescales much longer than decades. The values for [CO2]eq presented here do not reflect important non-linearities that might arise from e.g. increasing ocean acidification, and that would allow for concentrations to continue to slowly rise even as energy consumption rates stall [37]. With respect to globally-averaged surface temperature anomalies, it has been argued that they have a linear relationship with cumulative emissions of carbon. This sensitivity depends only weakly upon whether emissions are rising and falling, and the maximum CO2 concentration that is reached. A value of 1.6°C per Tt C [45] can be used as a rough guide, in which case persistence of current 10 Gt C yr−1 emissions rates would imply a further temperature rise of about 0.5°C by 2050. Assuming persistence in current 2.4% yr−1 energy consumption growth rates, and no further decarbonization, the increase is 0.7°C.

    ...

    the specific value of λ that was identified is 5.9±0.2 gigawatts per trillion 2010 US dollars, ... Any evidence of a sustained downward trend in λ may help pinpoint decoupling of economic production from civilization’s metabolic needs.
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