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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day
    DNF
    DNF --- ---
    PER2: asfalt v kterym jsme si namaceli boty cestou od rybnika je tak trochu minuly stoleti ;) A abych ti zkazil vtip, "asfalt" pro vyrobu dalnic je spis neco jako bitumenovy beton, predpokladam ze to bude slozitejsi, pojiv bude vicero, pro ruzny pouziti, zatizeni ... stavari a betonova lobby.
    PER2
    PER2 --- ---
    SHEFIK: jakoze asfalt ty horky dny vydrzi lip, oukej ;)
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TUHO: a samozrejme jde o ten hyper-civilizacni smer [ TADEAS ], tzn. statne-korporatni projekt, kterej je urychlovanej digitalnim vyvojem:

    ‘It will change everything’: DeepMind’s AI makes gigantic leap in solving protein structures
    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03348-4

    tj. jde se k synteticky biologii, potazmo k synteticky bytosti / kyborgovi, programovatelny biomase.

    nakolik zijeme na planete, v planetarnim spolecenstvi, nevyhneme se [jakozto hyperpredatori] managementu ekosystemu, k cemuz paradoxne muze pomoct to, ze civilizacni naroky na ekosystem opadnou, jakmile proslapneme tu cesty syntetickejch bilkovin, precision fermentace, etc. ... na zaklade nefosilnich energii.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TUHO:

    Photovoltaic-driven microbial protein production can use land and sunlight more efficiently than conventional crops | PNAS
    https://www.pnas.org/content/118/26/e2015025118

    taky TADEAS, TADEAS, TADEAS, TADEAS

    a

    New Report: Major disruption in food and agriculture in next decade — RethinkX
    https://www.rethinkx.com/press-release/2019/9/16/new-report-major-disruption-in-food-and-agriculture-in-next-decade
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Combining solar power and microbes could produce 10 times more protein than crops such as soya beans, according to a new study.

    The system would also have very little impact on the environment, the researchers said, in stark contrast to livestock farming which results in huge amounts of climate-heating gases as well as water pollution.

    The concept uses electricity from solar panels and carbon dioxide from the air to create fuel for microbes, which are grown in bioreactor vats and then processed into dry protein powders. The process makes highly efficient use of land, water and fertiliser and could be deployed anywhere, not just in countries with strong sunshine or fertile soils, the scientists said.

    Food security is a “critical issue” for humanity in coming decades, they said, with the global population growing, biofuels competing for land with crops, and about 800 million people already undernourished today. Furthermore, tackling the climate crisis will be near impossible without slashing emissions from animal and dairy food production.

    Microbes and solar power ‘could produce 10 times more food than plants’ | Food | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/21/microbes-and-solar-power-could-produce-10-times-more-food-than-plants
    PAD
    PAD --- ---
    KEB
    KEB --- ---
    Čtenářské hlasování o Ropáka 2020 - Ekolist.cz
    https://ekolist.cz/cz/zpravodajstvi/zpravy/ctenarske-hlasovani-o-ropaka-2020
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS: koment

    Paul Maidowski
    https://twitter.com/_ppmv/status/1404605486977146893?s=19

    Imagine being more upset about the use of a "net" (or not) in front of "zero emissions" in policy papers, than about the assumption that humans could survive in meaningful numbers without emitting waste/pollution (incl. CO2) & dissipating heat

    priorities please, this is no game~
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Explainer: Will global warming ‘stop’ as soon as net-zero emissions are reached? | Carbon Brief
    https://www.carbonbrief.org/explainer-will-global-warming-stop-as-soon-as-net-zero-emissions-are-reached

    A worthwhile read from @hausfath for @CarbonBrief on why temperatures will likely stop rising once we stop emitting CO2.

    I dislike the ubiquitous use of net-zero for the usual 'misuse' reasons. But drop/caveat the 'net' & its an important contribution.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    RealClimate: Climate Sensitivity: A new assessment
    https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2020/07/climate-sensitivity-a-new-assessment/

    https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019RG000678

    Science Magazine ranked the Sherwood et al (including Zeke) result - (finally!) narrowing the 66% range for ECS to 2.6–3.9 K - as runner-up scientific breakthrough of 2020... just behind the Covid-19 vaccines.

    ...

    That this research didn't make a bigger public impact, I think, goes to the bias towards sexier results discussing extremes or upending of prior results.

    Monumental as it was, "We finally narrowed the ECS!" seemed to either escape attention, or not fit certain narratives.

    ...

    Here is the money-shot, Figure 24 from "An Assessment of Earth's Climate Sensitivity Using Multiple Lines of Evidence", comparing their results to IPCC AR5 canonical 1.5-4.5°C 66% range for ECS.



    TADEAS
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS:

    How Climate Change Has Battered the West Before Summer Even Begins - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/17/climate/wildfires-drought-climate-change-west-coast.html
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Canada, not China, dominates Amazon energy and mining - China Dialogue
    https://chinadialogue.net/en/energy/canada-dominates-amazon-energy-and-mining/

    Canadian companies have the greatest share of foreign investment in Amazon energy and mining projects while companies headquartered in China control scarcely 10% across the hydropower and extractives sectors, according to new data published by US think-tank the Inter-American Dialogue.

    “I don’t think anyone knew exactly how active Canada was in the Amazon,” said Lisa Viscidi, director of the Dialogue’s energy, climate change and extractive industries programme, adding that the lower level of Chinese participation was surprising.

    The collection of data on hydroelectric, oil and gas, and mining in the Amazon aims to identify the companies and banks with projects in a vital ecosystem. The Amazon serves as a critical carbon sink and home to indigenous groups and several million species of plants and animals, according to the report “Energy and Mining in the Amazon”.

    Throughout South America, 197 Canadian mining companies own or operate an estimated US$8 billion worth of projects. In an area the report defines as the “biogeographic Amazon” – the cradle of the ecosystem’s biodiversity that extends beyond legal-political boundaries – they control equity shares equivalent to 47 whole projects, the data shows.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Redirecting subsidies for the good of nature | China Dialogue
    https://chinadialogue.net/en/nature/redirecting-subsidies-for-the-good-of-nature/

    lot of money is needed to prevent spiralling biodiversity loss; somewhere between US$598 billion and US$824 billion a year, according to the Nature Conservancy and Paulson Institute. The good news is that around half of that could be met with existing finance, redirected from activities that damage nature to those that enhance it.

    The bad news is countries already agreed to do this in 2010, but most failed to even identify what subsidies they were promoting that caused problems, never mind reform them. The value of subsidies that harm biodiversity has been estimated to be five or six times higher than finance for promoting conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.

    ...

    Several recent major reports have stressed the importance of reforming subsidies. In January, an overview of biodiversity finance by environmental think-tank Global Canopy warned that even with increased investment from the private sector, the biodiversity funding gap would likely not be filled unless harmful subsidies estimated at US$1 trillion were redirected to nature-positive activities.

    The Dasgupta review, commissioned by the UK Treasury, also argued for subsidy reform aimed at protecting nature, noting that current government subsidies for agriculture, fisheries, forestry and mining encouraged overexploitation.

    ...

    lot of money is needed to prevent spiralling biodiversity loss; somewhere between US$598 billion and US$824 billion a year, according to the Nature Conservancy and Paulson Institute. The good news is that around half of that could be met with existing finance, redirected from activities that damage nature to those that enhance it.

    The bad news is countries already agreed to do this in 2010, but most failed to even identify what subsidies they were promoting that caused problems, never mind reform them. The value of subsidies that harm biodiversity has been estimated to be five or six times higher than finance for promoting conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.

    ...

    members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) have been discussing fishing subsidies since 2001. Governments had agreed in 2015 to eliminate subsidies that support illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing and prohibit subsidies that contribute to overfishing and overcapacity by 2020, but missed the deadline.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Russia’s slow progress on climate action set to pick up speed
    https://chinadialogue.net/en/climate/russias-slow-progress-on-climate-action-set-to-pick-up-speed/

    Russia has been slow to move on climate action, as it is a hydrocarbon superpower and oil and gas play a significant role in the economy. Thus, there is a powerful lobby intrinsically opposed to – or at least suspicious of – radical measures to move quickly on climate change action. The government must steer a careful course. The emerging response seems to be that there is no one-size-fits-all policy in climate action, but rather many ways to move towards net zero. President Putin devoted fully one quarter of his 45-minute keynote speech at St Petersburg Economic Forum in early June to climate change. His main theme was that the problem presents huge, international challenges, which cannot be tackled by countries acting individually. He has instructed the Russian government to develop and deliver a whole host of measures in the arena of climate change action, with a detailed plan to be published by October this year. Part of this plan will be to make greater use of so-called green bonds, which will be issued to fund specific climate change and renewable energy projects. These also have the advantage of not being subject to Western sanctions as they will be issued by the project managers and not directly by government ministries.

    ...

    For Moscow, a particularly contentious issue is the EU’s proposed carbon tax on goods imported from countries that do not meet the emission limits set under the Paris Agreement. These limits are at the core of the EU’s Green deal. As it stands, Russia faces the possibility of an annual tariff cost of between $10 billion and $50 billion. Moscow argues that it has already cut emissions by over 30% from the 1990 measurement, and the fact this reduction is the result of the elimination of a lot of old Soviet industry is inconsequential. It also argues that the share of renewable energy in its total energy mix is over 25% because of hydro and nuclear power.

    Moscow is also arguing that Russian natural gas, which Putin emphasised at the St Petersburg Economic Forum, is much cleaner and cheaper than US LNG (liquid natural gas) which is mostly produced by fracking. This is a message, along with the position that gas should be considered a transition fuel, he hopes will resonate with the powerful environmental groups in Europe. Especially with the German Green Party, which appears set to have a role in government after the September parliamentary election. A big part of Russia’s messaging to the EU and the US will focus on the contribution of Russia’s vast forests and wetlands in absorbing CO2 – the first steps in the initiative to highlight the role of the forest lies in much more detailed measurement of the absorption effect, and work in this arena has started. Many Russian experts argue that, on a net aggregate basis, these factors mean Russia is already one of the lowest carbon emitters on the planet.

    ...

    The use of solar and wind generation in Russia is, so far, minuscule. But the government has announced new targets for the development of these types of renewables, anticipating a rise in usage from around 1% in the generation mix in 2021 to 4-5% over the next few years. The World Bank has pointed out that Russia could become a world leader in wind power, with its vast tracts of land and suitable “wind corridors” in areas of northern Russia. Moreover, several regions in the south of the country are very suitable for solar generation. Developments in the southern Republic of Kalmykia are especially encouraging.

    The government has published a road map for the development of hydrogen and is drafting initiatives to accelerate the production of green hydrogen. However, a lot of attention is also being paid to the further development of blue hydrogen, produced by the steam reforming of methane, abundant in Russia, and the use of carbon capture and storage. Currently, blue hydrogen is much cheaper to produce than the green variety and this cost difference is likely to persist for several years or even decades. The Russians see significant competitive advantage in developing hydrogen from various sources.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS:

    Grains analyst missing as China shuts down information on failed crop - ABC News
    https://amp.abc.net.au/article/100219524

    A Chinese grains analyst has reportedly been jailed and another is said to be under house arrest
    Australian grains analysts say China is suppressing information about grain shortages to keep world prices down
    China is buying up near-record amounts of grain while reporting a bumper crop of its own
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Paul Maidowski
    https://twitter.com/_ppmv/status/1406492943276445697?s=19


    Complex humanitarian emergencies: Climate & social risk are coupled: „Independent analysts who report on China's grains industry have reportedly been arrested & their online businesses shut down to stop them from telling the truth about the country's below-average crop.“

    ...

    "Last year, the flooding was so bad there were fears the Three Gorges Dam would be overtopped. As ii
    t was, the release of water downriver was so great it scoured the topsoil of millions of acres of formally productive farmland. "

    “The flood is coming again.”

    video:

    https://twitter.com/Michael90656953/status/1406243462735831040?s=19
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS:

    Paul Maidowski
    https://twitter.com/_ppmv/status/1397927177774010370?s=19

    @ all who work on climate: We'll reach CO2 levels in the hot MCO Miocene range ~450-550 ppm even at insanely optimistic assumptions. Does the risk that we may be committed to up to 7C warming not deserve attention? Again, questions don't ask themselves.

    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Growth without economic growth — European Environment Agency
    https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/growth-without-economic-growth

    Economic growth is closely linked to increases in production, consumption and resource use and has detrimental effects on the natural environment and human health. It is unlikely that a long-lasting, absolute decoupling of economic growth from environmental pressures and impacts can be achieved at the global scale; therefore, societies need to rethink what is meant by growth and progress and their meaning for global sustainability.

    ...

    The ongoing ‘Great Acceleration’ [1] in loss of biodiversity, climate change, pollution and loss of natural capital is tightly coupled to economic activities and economic growth.
    Full decoupling of economic growth and resource consumption may not be possible.

    Doughnut economics, post-growth and degrowth are alternatives to mainstream conceptions of economic growth that offer valuable insights.

    The European Green Deal and other political initiatives for a sustainable future require not only technological change but also changes in consumption and social practices.

    Growth is culturally, politically and institutionally ingrained. Change requires us to address these barriers democratically. The various communities that live simply offer inspiration for social innovation.
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