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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Thank you so much for ruining my day
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The drought ravaging East African wildlife and livestock - BBC News
    https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-africa-59513118

    At least 26 million people are struggling for food following consecutive poor rainfall seasons in the Horn of Africa.

    Drought conditions in northern Kenya, much of Somalia and southern Ethiopia are predicted to persist until at least mid-2022, putting lives at risk.

    The situation is already so bad that wild animals are dying in their hundreds and herders are reporting losses of up to 70% of their livestock.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Thousands of Iranian farmers protest against severe water shortages | Euronews
    https://www.euronews.com/2021/11/20/thousands-of-iranian-farmers-protest-against-severe-water-shortages
    FRK_R23
    FRK_R23 --- ---
    SHEFIK: Simpsons already did it.

    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    #geoengineering

    Amazon Is Quietly Researching How to Block Out the Sun
    https://futurism.com/amazon-geoengineering-research/
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The Elephant in the Room: Militarisation & the Climate Crisis
    https://youtu.be/ed7Nc1bRXFU
    TADEAS
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    Humans Are Doomed to Go Extinct - Scientific American
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/humans-are-doomed-to-go-extinct/

    As a paleontologist, I take the long view. Mammal species tend to come and go rather rapidly, appearing, flourishing and disappearing in a million years or so. The fossil record indicates that Homo sapiens has been around for 315,000 years or so, but for most of that time, the species was rare—so rare, in fact, that it came close to extinction, perhaps more than once. Thus were sown the seeds of humanity’s doom: the current population has grown, very rapidly, from something much smaller. The result is that, as a species, H. sapiens is extraordinarily samey. There is more genetic variation in a few troupes of wild chimpanzees than in the entire human population. Lack of genetic variation is never good for species survival.

    What is more, over the past few decades, the quality of human sperm has declined massively, possibly leading to lower birth rates, for reasons nobody is really sure about. Pollution—a by-product of human degradation of the environment—is one possible factor. Another might be stress, which, I suggest, could be triggered by living in close proximity to other people for a long period. For most of human evolution, people rode light on the land, living in scattered bands. The habit of living in cities, practically on top of one another (literally so, in an apartment block) is a very recent habit.

    Another reason for the downturn in population growth is economic. Politicians strive for relentless economic growth, but this is not sustainable in a world where resources are finite. H. sapiens already sequesters between 25 and 40 percent of net primary productivity—that is, the organic matter that plants create out of air, water and sunshine. As well as being bad news for the millions of other species on our planet that rely on this matter, such sequestration might be having deleterious effects on human economic prospects. People nowadays have to work harder and longer to maintain the standards of living enjoyed by their parents, if such standards are even obtainable. Indeed, there is growing evidence that economic productivity has stalled or even declined globally in the past 20 years. One result could be that people are putting off having children, perhaps so long that their own fertility starts to decline.

    An additional factor in the shrinking rate of population growth is something that can only be regarded as entirely welcome and long overdue: the economic, reproductive and political emancipation of women. It began hardly more than a century ago but has already doubled the workforce and improved the educational attainment, longevity and economic potential of human beings generally. With improved contraception and better health care, women need not bear as many children to ensure that at least some survive the perils of early infancy. But having fewer children, and doing so later, means that populations are likely to shrink.

    The most insidious threat to humankind is something called “extinction debt.” There comes a time in the progress of any species, even ones that seem to be thriving, when extinction will be inevitable, no matter what they might do to avert it. The cause of extinction is usually a delayed reaction to habitat loss. The species most at risk are those that dominate particular habitat patches at the expense of others, who tend to migrate elsewhere, and are therefore spread more thinly. Humans occupy more or less the whole planet, and with our sequestration of a large wedge of the productivity of this planetwide habitat patch, we are dominant within it. H. sapiens might therefore already be a dead species walking.

    The signs are already there for those willing to see them. When the habitat becomes degraded such that there are fewer resources to go around; when fertility starts to decline; when the birth rate sinks below the death rate; and when genetic resources are limited—the only way is down. The question is “How fast?”
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Katedra fyziky atmosféry MFF UK
    Antarktický cirkumpolární proud v důsledku globálního oteplování zrychluje (zejména v zeměpisných šířkách 48°S - 58°S). Ukazuje tak nová studie, která zkoumala data z družic a ze sond projektu Argo.
    Úvaha mimo tuto studii: Mohlo by se jednat o příklad kladné zpětné vazby, neboť zrychlující proud ještě více tepelně izoluje vody kolem Antarktidy a když ještě navíc bude pokračovat globální oteplování, teplotní gradient mezi Jižním oceánem a ostatními oceány bude o to více narůstat. A jak uvádí článek, velký teplotní gradient vede na (v tomto případě další) zrychlení proudu mezi vodními masami.
    Odkaz na původní článek: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-021-01212-5
    Shrnutí článku: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/11/211129122815.htm

    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Nekdo neco bliz k tomu Shellu a pruzkumu?

    #tohellwithshell

    A Song for Shell Oil (John Lennon - Imagine Reimagined) // Save South Africa's Wild Coast
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtZlEEjRRk8
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    we are fucked

    A study recently published in the journal Climatic Change is among the first to examine the effects of using climate crisis and climate emergency. It reported that reading these phrases “did not have any effect on public engagement,” measured in terms of whether the words had altered people’s emotions, their support for climate policy, or their belief that action could make a difference.

    “We were pretty surprised that the terminology has such minimal effects,” said Lauren Feldman, a professor of media studies at Rutgers University and a coauthor of the study. Researchers found one instance where the stronger phrasing backfired: News organizations deploying climate emergency came across as slightly less trustworthy, perhaps because it could sound alarmist.

    The overall takeaway is that journalists and climate advocates might be getting too hung up on specific words when the bigger picture is much more important, Feldman said. What makes an article resonate with people has more to do with its subject. News stories that emphasize taking action tend to make people feel hopeful. Articles that highlight solutions are also viewed as more credible, and people are less resistant to them. Consider a recent piece from the New York Times that explores how the Republican mayor of Carmel, Indiana, built 140 roundabouts in town, in part to cut down on the carbon emissions from cars waiting at stoplights.

    Calling climate change a 'crisis' doesn't do what you think | Grist
    https://grist.org/language/calling-climate-change-a-crisis-or-emergency-stu/
    TADEAS
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    Jonathan Pie: The World's End (COP26 short film with George Monbiot, Caroline Lucas & Ed Miliband)
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=23nDxPSIoAw&feature=emb_title
    TADEAS
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    Sir David King offers a final warning - IEMA
    https://www.iema.net/articles/sir-david-kings-offers-a-final-warning

    “The main message is that, unless we make the transitions necessary, we are going to lose what we understand by our civilisation over the coming decades,” he says. “If sea levels continue to rise, the map of the world will be dramatically changed, because 80% of our cities sit on coastlines – so we’re going to see a massive transformation. I’m not saying it’s the end of humanity, but it’s certainly the end of humanity as we know it.”

    The signs are already here, with severe heatwaves, storms, fires, droughts and floods no longer unusual across the entire Northern Hemisphere – and the situation could get much worse. “We have just experienced a period of methane explosions in the Northern Arctic region that could lead to a rapid rise in global temperatures, because methane is a much more serious greenhouse gas per molecule than CO2,” King explains. “The severity of the storms we’ve seen in Europe this year is surely a wake-up call to all of us. There are actions we can take, and the very last thing we should do is give up. I don’t believe that is an option at all.”
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Climate Change and Where We Are , Session 6, with Rupert Read
    https://youtube.com/watch?v=9h0SfcQFqmQ


    The sine qua non now is: taking adaptation seriously. Because it’s too late for anything else, anything less. Adaptation - to the climate and biodiversity damage already here and to the worse damage coming - needs to be adequately defined. Shallow, incremental, defensive adaptation (e.g. building hard flood defences) will be worse than nothing if pursued by itself: for it doubles down on the illusion that unmitigated climate damage is civilisationally survivable, and it is high carbon (thus worsening the underlying problem, in a vicious circle). Adaptation must instead be transformative.

    The other huge reason to pivot now to adaptation is that as we do so we make the crisis psychologically real: to everyone else, and to ourselves. Whereas deadlines for future action are basically can-kicking exercises. Talking and doing (transformative) adaptation is thereby additionally the most effective way now of motivating realer mitigation/prevention!

    This talk concerns how we can adapt transformatively to incipient climate breakdown.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    upping the game

    Jailed for 51 weeks for protesting? Britain is becoming a police state by stealth | George Monbiot | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/dec/01/imprisoned-51-weeks-protesting-britain-police-state

    Priti Patel, the home secretary, shoved 18 extra pages into the bill after it had passed through the Commons, and after the second reading in the House of Lords. It looks like a deliberate ploy to avoid effective parliamentary scrutiny. Yet in most of the media there’s a resounding silence.

    Among the new amendments are measures that would ban protesters from attaching themselves to another person, to an object, or to land. Not only would they make locking on – a crucial tool of protest the world over – illegal, but they are so loosely drafted that they could apply to anyone holding on to anything, on pain of up to 51 weeks’ imprisonment.
    BERENIKEE
    BERENIKEE --- ---
    TUHO: Ajo tak tam jsem ještě nebyla:))diky
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Vast networks of underground fungi – the “circulatory system of the planet” – are to be mapped for the first time, in an attempt to protect them from damage and improve their ability to absorb and store carbon dioxide.
    Fungi use carbon to build networks in the soil, which connect to plant roots and act as nutrient “highways”, exchanging carbon from plant roots for nutrients. For instance, some fungi are known to supply 80% of phosphorus to their host plants.
    Underground fungal networks can extend for many miles but are rarely noticed, though trillions of miles of them are thought to exist around the world. These fungi are vital to the biodiversity of soils and soil fertility, but little is known about them.

    World’s vast networks of underground fungi to be mapped for first time | Fungi | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/nov/30/worlds-vast-networks-of-underground-fungi-to-be-mapped-for-first-time
    OTZ
    OTZ --- ---
    BERENIKEE: tak to se mozna podari udrzet otepleni pod 1.5°C i bez krize
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    varoufakis o(promarnene) sanci, kterou koronavirova krize predstavovala

    Pandemie nabídla Evropě příležitost zformulovat věrohodný plán dobře zafinancovaného přechodu k Zelené energetické unii. Pokud bychom zavedli evropské dluhopisy, mohla se Evropská centrální banka vymanit z očistce permanentního maskování bankrotu a vyhlásit, že bude krýt jen dluhopisy vydané Evropskou investiční bankou na financování Zelené energetické unie. To se ale nestalo. Evropa tu skutečně propásla příležitost vést svět silou svého příkladu od závislosti na fosilních palivech.

    Evropané v tom samozřejmě ale nejedou sami. Zatímco americký prezident Joe Biden mířil do Glasgow, Kongres USA v jednom ze svých charakteristicky zkorumpovaných politických rozhodnutí vypreparoval jeho už beztak značně osekané zelené plány ze zcela „hnědého“ infrastrukturního zákona, a změnu klimatu tak uložil k ledu.

    Krize Západem promarněná
    https://denikreferendum.cz/clanek/33402-krize-zapadem-promarnena
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    The Complete Guide to Restoring Your Soil - Workman Publishing
    https://www.workman.com/products/the-complete-guide-to-restoring-your-soil/paperback
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