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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day
    PETER_PAN
    PETER_PAN --- ---
    AYOS: A ad 4. Nic jako prirozeny cyklus neexistuje, jsme po usi v antropocenu a diskutovat ma cenu to cemu TADEAS rika managment ekosystemů. A ty jednotlive managmenty maji sledovat nejaky soubor cileu(a produkce potravin je jednim z tech cilu) a maji byt promysleny z globalniho kontextu a respektovat lokalni specifika.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    AYOS: ad 'je úplně jedno zda je to biogení, pyrogení nebo fosilní metan, jde o to, že je antropogenní'. -- jedno z jakeho pohledu? leda z toho, ze je to metan a ze nam nejak jde o koncentrace v atmosfere. potud ano. pokud ale jdeme dal a ptame se co s tim, tak metan z fosilnich zdroju je pro nas necim jinym nez z tech biologickejch - biologicky jsou systemy a ty muzeme nejaka managovat, kdezto fosilni metan je dusledkem developmentu energetickejch infrastruktur. fosilni metan potencialni muzeme eliminovat, biogenni rozhodne eliminovat nemuzeme, protoze ekosystemy tu vzdy nejaky jsou a budou a my jsme zavisli existencialne na jejich funkci daleko bazalneji nez na funkci fosilni civilizacni infrastruktury. ... tohle tvoje 'je to jedno' prave primo cili na ten fatalni omyl - ne, neni to jedno a je zdrcujici, ze to neni jasne videt. pokud je to jedno, pak eliminace bylozravcu, ryzovist, vysuseni mocalu je v jedny rovine s regulaci fosilnich infrastruktur. smutny, ne.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    AYOS: ne, nedavam to sem ukazku jako lzive propagandy. podle tebe to je lziva propaganda? propaganda ceho a co jsou ty lzi? rad se poinformuju. co vim:

    1/ nemluvi o vyvazene koncentraci v atmosfere, ale o vyvazenosti biogenniho cyklu metanu
    2/ ok. kdyz hledam, nachazim ruzny udaje, ipcc uvadi delsi
    3/ mluvi o "biogenic methane from steady-state sources", ne o metanu v atmosfere obecne. to je smysl toho prispevku - jak se zohlednuje v ruznejch modelech.
    4/ jakej industrialni intenzivni proces?
    DZODZO
    DZODZO --- ---
    AYOS: ad 2) mas odkaz na nejaku studiu ktora tvrdi ze je to dlhsie ako 8-12 rokov?
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    JIMIQ: krasny, ted uz bitcoin presahl dopady na klima, destabilizuje stredni vychod a muze mit diky blackoutum i brzo na uctu obeti na zivotech

    hned bych do nej nasypal naky korunky, takovou prilezitost si nechat ujit .)
    JIMIQ
    JIMIQ --- ---
    Ráj kryptoměn v Číně končí. Těžaři berou energii Íránu, lidé jsou potmě - Seznam Zprávy
    https://www.seznamzpravy.cz/...ptomen-v-cine-konci-tezari-berou-energii-iranu-lide-jsou-potme-146800

    poměrně rozsáhlý článek
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Governing In The Planetary Age
    https://www.noemamag.com/governing-in-the-planetary-age/

    If we’ve learned one lesson from the pandemic, it’s that nation-states don’t govern well at the planetary level or at the local level. The same is true for other planetary phenomena like climate change. Greenhouse gas emissions operate at a planetary level, but consequences vary dramatically from one locality to another. Neither the problem nor its impacts align with national boundaries.

    ...

    nation-states are also not the right institution for climate change adaptation: Los Angeles, Miami and Minneapolis are all impacted by climate change, but in vastly different ways that require vastly different policies. In fact, these cities’ climate impacts have more in common with cities in other nation-states (for example, Cape Town, Dhaka and Moscow, respectively) than they do with each other. Yet nation-states are wired for coordination and collaboration among the subnational entities contained within them, not across them.

    This dynamic is found across a range of major issues. From economic precarity to public health, the nation-state is ill-equipped to manage the planetary roots of the problems and the local consequences for communities.

    ...

    Solving these twin crises of ineffective and illegitimate governance requires a fundamental restructuring of our governing institutions. In particular, it requires stripping the nation-state of many of its powers and governance functions, moving some up to planetary institutions and others down to local institutions.

    ...

    The “planetary” refers to issues, processes and conditions that span the Earth and transcend nation-states. “Global” and “globalization” are the currently popular terms for describing world-scale issues. But the planet is not the globe: The globe is a conceptual category that frames the Earth in human terms. Globalization, likewise, adopts a fundamentally human-centric understanding of the “integration” that has happened over the last few decades — the accelerating flow of people, goods, ideas, money and more.

    The planet, by contrast, frames Earth without specific reference to humans. “To encounter the planet,” explains Dipesh Chakrabarty, “is to encounter something that is the condition of human existence and yet profoundly indifferent to that existence.” The Earth is not ours alone. Worldwide integration is not merely the intentional work of humans. Humans are embedded and codependent with microbes, the climate and technologically enabled emergent trans-species communities.

    Planetary thinking emerges from ongoing transformations in the fields of ontology, or the nature of being, and epistemology


    ...

    Like Galileo and Darwin in earlier eras, the planetary represents a paradigm shift. It is neither empirically nor normatively adequate to assume, as the idea of globalization does, that humans top the global hierarchy and all else must and can bend to the march of human progress. We are but one (very recent) component in the biogeochemical ferment of the Earth, caught up in feedback loops of the carbon cycle and microbial and multispecies codependency.

    ...

    By planetary governance institutions, we do not mean the traditional institutions of global governance. The U.N., I.M.F. and World Health Organization, among other contemporary global governance institutions, are multilateral member-state institutions that focus on human-specific flows and represent the interests of their member states. They don’t respond directly to planetary challenges or answer directly to citizens.

    The planetary demands new binding institutions at the planetary scale, not simply member state institutions that operate on a voluntarist basis. This does not mean a single world state. We envision a specifically delimited authority at the planetary level over specifically planetary things.

    In practice, this means we need binding planetary institutions that go beyond the Paris accord for climate, beyond the W.H.O. for syndromic surveillance and health, beyond the U.N. Environmental Program to deal with biodiversity and a wholly new planetary institution to deal with tech-related risks. Together, these would form a new planetary tier of governance, above and beyond the nation-state.

    ...

    Together, nested and interlocking planetary, national and local institutions would form a system of multilevel governance. This system architecture allows for governance bodies to be better suited to the scale of the issue they are tasked with governing. Rather than default to the nation-state (and then wring our hands when the nation-state fails), as we do now, the principle of subsidiarity provides a rule of thumb for determining which governing institutions should be assigned to deal with which challenges.
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    Devět zemí chce od Evropské komise datum zákazu prodeje aut na fosilní paliva - Ekolist.cz
    https://ekolist.cz/.../devet-zemi-chce-od-evropske-komise-datum-zakazu-prodeje-aut-na-fosilni-paliva
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS:

    Grand Transitions: How the Modern World Was Made, Smil, Vaclav - Amazon.com
    https://www.amazon.com/Grand-Transitions-Modern-World-Made-ebook/dp/B08WHLCN1H/
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Grand Transitions: How the Modern World Was Made. – Vaclav Smil
    http://vaclavsmil.com/2021/03/05/grand-transitions-how-the-modern-world-was-made/

    What makes the modern world work? The answer to this deceptively simple question lies in four “grand transitions” of civilization – in populations, agriculture, energy, and economics – which have transformed the way we live. Societies that have undergone all four transitions emerge into an era of radically different population dynamics, food surpluses (and waste), abundant energy use, and expanding economic opportunities. Simultaneously, in other parts of the world, hundreds of millions remain largely untouched by these developments. Through erudite storytelling, Vaclav Smil investigates the fascinating and complex interactions of these transitions. He argues that the moral imperative to share modernity’s benefits has become more acute with increasing economic inequality, but addressing this imbalance would make it exceedingly difficult to implement the changes necessary for the long-term preservation of the environment. Thus, managing the fifth transition – environmental changes from natural-resource depletion, biodiversity loss, and global warming – will determine the success or eventual failure of the grand transitions that have made the world we live in today.



    Want Not, Waste Not
    https://www.noemamag.com/want-not-waste-not/

    There is no one threshold. There are many different thresholds. A lot of people said that China over the last few years was overdoing the exploitation of its natural resources. I said, “No, it may be constantly collapsing in some places, but it’s also constantly improving elsewhere.”

    ...

    Let’s look at things as they are: There is no “economy” — there is only energy conversion. Your car, your heated houses, your flights to Europe — all must take a big hit. Unless we invent some miraculous type of energy technology, seriously stemming climate change means we would have to deliberately decrease our standards of living. It’s impossible for everyone on the planet to live like people in Santa Clara County and still have a perfect environment. Just impossible.

    ...

    The idea that limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2030 will make a big enough difference is wishful thinking. There are many papers scientifically showing that much more warming is already in the pipeline. We need to admit that the train has left the station. It’s very likely the warming ahead will exceed 2 degrees Celsius at least. So, yes, the realism you speak of must involve coping with rising seas, intense storms, perpetual wildfires and the rest.

    ...

    Our greatest hope is to finally realize how wasteful we are. We simply need to do what I call “rational management.” We waste up to 40% of all food we grow. And agriculture accounts for about 10% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. We release all that into the biosphere to grow food, and then we waste 30, 35, 40% of it every year, year after year.

    Now, it’s impossible to run an economy with zero waste. But we could bring down waste to less than 15%. Certainly less than 30. The same is true about energy for transport. Thirty years ago, the best-selling vehicle was not the Ford F-150, but small and medium-sized cars. We waste energy, we waste food, we waste materials — in so many ways.
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    How China Aims To Beat The U.S., Europe At ‘Net Zero’ Carbon
    https://www.forbes.com/...4/how-china-aims-to-beat-the-us-europe-at-net-zero-carbon/?sh=79db3704708a

    What does it mean? It means China is gearing up to invest in clean power technologies (think EV batteries and solar panels) and will add more zero-carbon, zero-emissions energy to its grid. Nuclear stood front and center during Premier Li Keqiang’s 2021 Government Work Report delivered at the start of the week long meeting.
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    How Dirt Could Help Save the Planet - Scientific American
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-dirt-could-help-save-the-planet/

    As the largest terrestrial carbon sink, which stores three times more carbon than the entire atmosphere, soil offers a vast repository with immense, untapped capacity. Since the beginning of agriculture, food production has removed about half, or 133 gigatons, of the carbon once stored in agricultural soil, and the rate of loss has increased dramatically in the last two centuries, creating a large void to be filled. Restoring this carbon stockpile would sequester the equivalent of almost one fifth of atmospheric carbon, bringing greenhouse gas concentrations nearly to pre–industrial revolution levels and making soil less erodible. Let’s be realistic—we’re not going to restore 133 gigatons of carbon any time soon. But working toward this goal could be a centerpiece of a multifaceted plan to address both erosion and climate change.

    Farmers know that soil is no longer a renewable resource. Many farms are simply running out of it. A 2018 inventory from the U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that the United States loses soil on average 10 times faster than it is generated; and in states such as Iowa, New Mexico and Nevada, erosion is much more rapid. In parts of Africa and Asia, soil erosion outstrips replenishment as much as a hundredfold.

    ...

    Replacing just 10 percent of a corn crop with strategically placed prairie plants reduces erosion 95 percent! Similarly, reforestation reduces erosion with large tree roots that anchor and enrich soil. All of these soil-protective practices accelerate carbon sequestration, reducing greenhouse gas accumulation.

    ...

    Intensive regenerative grazing, a method for pasturing cattle that boosts carbon sequestration by stimulating plant growth, duplicates the effects of the herds of bison that once roamed the American plains, contributing to formation of some of Earth’s most fertile soils. Regenerative grazing regimes involve moving cattle frequently—sometimes several times in a single day—to new pasture, thereby preventing the animals from cropping the vegetation close to the ground. The remaining plants recover and start growing again more quickly than those that have been reduced to nubs, enabling them to be more photosynthetically active over the growing season and accumulate more carbon. Some researchers estimate that regenerative grazing boosts carbon fixation through photosynthesis enough to cancel out most of the greenhouse gases released by beef production.
    PALEONTOLOG
    PALEONTOLOG --- ---
    KEB: winwin
    KEB
    KEB --- ---
    PALEONTOLOG: anebo je to babišova úlitba eko a snaha nabrat voliče u zelených (v kampani pak bude vykládat jak chvaletuce zavřel) Nehledě na to, že Babiš už si protlačil podporu bioplynkám.
    PALEONTOLOG
    PALEONTOLOG --- ---
    JINDRICH: tykač halt babišovi nenasypal do chřtánu
    JINDRICH
    JINDRICH --- ---
    Ministerstvo životního prostředí zrušilo emisní výjimku pro elektrárnu Chvaletice. Pokud společnost Sev.en miliardáře Pavla Tykače nestihne úřady do srpna přesvědčit, že ji skutečně potřebuje, elektrárna bude muset utlumit provoz.

    https://denikreferendum.cz/...silo-vyjimku-pro-chvaletice-od-srpna-nejspis-budou-muset-omezit-provoz
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Soil Regen Summit 2021 - Be Part of The Soil-ution
    https://summit.soilfoodweb.com/soil-regen-summit-march-2021/
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Jiří Krejčík: V Indii protestuje čtvrt miliardy zemědělců. Vláda těží z image demokratického státu – A2larm
    https://a2larm.cz/...ii-protestuje-ctvrt-miliardy-zemedelcu-vlada-tezi-z-image-demokratickeho-statu/

    Už od začátku prosince probíhají v Indii bez většího zájmu českých médií obří protesty zemědělců proti reformám, které v září schválil indický parlament pod vedením Naréndry Módího a Indické lidové strany. Do protestů se od té doby zapojilo neuvěřitelných 250 milionů lidí a nehodlají s nimi přestat, dokud indická vláda reformy nezruší. O co ve zmiňovaných reformách jde? Jak na protesty reaguje indická vláda? A proč o zemědělské stávce na sociálních sítích mluví i Greta Thunberg nebo popstar Rihanna? O tom jsme si v novém Kolapsu povídali s politologem a indologem Jiřím Krejčíkem ze Sociologického ústavu Akademie věd České republiky.1
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The Biogenic Carbon Cycle and Cattle | CLEAR Center
    https://clear.ucdavis.edu/explainers/biogenic-carbon-cycle-and-cattle

    Cattle are often thought to contribute to climate change because they belch methane (CH4), a greenhouse gas. While this is true, cattle do belch methane, it is actually part of an important natural cycle, known as the biogenic carbon cycle.

    ...

    This infographic is essentially consistent with the GWP* climate model which more correctly takes into account methane's nature as a flow gas, especially from biogenic sources. According to GWP* biogenic methane from steady-state sources (those not changing in their rate of emission) only has 4 times the warming of CO2. This is because the whole system is already in equilibrium with the rate of creation and breakdown of CH4.

    This also takes into account the cycle of the CO2 stock gas going back into the biogeic cycle. This doesn't occur with fossil methane emissions however as that CO2 from the breakdown becomes part of the global CO2 stock until drawdown sinks take it back out giving it a much more substantial warming potential. The additional methane from these sources also has a disproportionate warming potential as it's not part of the existing warming equilibrium, something like 90 times the warming potential of CO2...

    PALEONTOLOG
    PALEONTOLOG --- ---
    XCHAOS: olol, moh sis vydelat na dalsi cinzak a dobrovolne jsi si nechal jen jeden :)
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam