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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Destroying the Future Is the Most Cost-Effective
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2026/05/09/iran-farms-thailand-food/

    A Thai rice farmer has decided that the rational response to the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran is to leave 19 hectares of land empty. The Washington Post reports that Saithong Jamjai, 53, spent weeks calculating whether to plant again in central Thailand and reached the same answer each time: fuel, fertiliser, plastics and other inputs would cost at least $33,000, while the rice she expects to sell in August would bring in only $22,000. Her conclusion was blunt: “A confirmed loss”. So she is letting the land bake under the husks from last season.

    The mechanism carrying the war into Asian rice fields is urea, the nitrogen fertiliser that modern high-yield farming depends on. Iran’s destruction of gas infrastructure in the Gulf, combined with U.S. and Iranian efforts to choke the Strait of Hormuz, has blocked supplies of fuel and gas-linked fertiliser products from leaving the Middle East. According to Pranshi Goyal, senior analyst at CRU Group, 30 per cent of global urea supply has effectively been “wiped out”. Urea spot prices are up 40 per cent since February; weekly production in Iran has fallen from 182,000 to 63,000 metric tons, while Qatar and Bahrain have dropped to zero in the figures cited. China has restricted fertiliser exports to protect its own farmers, and Russia is seeing demand rise in a way that could strengthen its economy and aid its war in Ukraine.

    The Food and Agriculture Organization is warning that the shock is spreading through the global food system by calendar, not by geography alone. Speaking in Rome, FAO director general Dongyu Qu called the war “a disruption at the core of the global agrifood system”. FAO chief economist Maximo Torero said the worst effects are currently in Asia, where Thailand, the Philippines, Bangladesh and Australia are entering key sowing periods, but the crisis is “moving east to west and south to north”. Farmers are already skipping planting, reducing acreage, or cutting fertiliser use, which means lower yields later this year.

    The next pressure point is June, when India and Brazil, two of the world’s biggest agricultural producers, are expected to ramp up urea orders. If ships carrying urea are still not moving by then, Torero warns of “significant yield loss” across many countries, higher commodity prices, renewed inflation, and a hit to economic growth “very close to what happened in covid-19”. A likely super El Niño this year could add extreme heat and drought to the fertiliser shock, making the same planting decisions even riskier.

    Thailand’s official assurances are already colliding with shortages on the ground. The Commerce Ministry said in April that the country had 343,000 tons of urea, enough for the upcoming planting season. But the Post found fertiliser shops across Ayutthaya and Suphan Buri provinces out of urea for weeks. One wholesaler sent a truck to a marketplace used by large dealers and got nothing after four days. Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow says Thailand still has sufficient farming supplies, while also acknowledging that the country is competing against richer nations and has “not faced such a crisis before”. A Russian supply attempt is likely to fail because shipping disruptions mean the urea would take at least two months to arrive, too late for the current planting window.

    Thai farmers are being squeezed from both sides. Their costs are rising because fertiliser and fuel are scarce, while their expected income is falling because the Middle East, one of their major export markets, has effectively shut. The region accounted for 17 per cent of Thailand’s rice exports in 2025, with Iraq the largest single destination. Since the war began, rice shipments to the Gulf have stopped. Malaysia and the Philippines have absorbed some of the excess supply, but not enough, leaving a glut that keeps rice prices low just as input costs spike.

    The human consequences are already visible: farmers taking credit from local loan sharks, planting only part of their land, growing vegetables and fish for subsistence, considering day labour, and reporting anxiety, debt and depression. Pramote Charoensilp, president of the Thai Farmers and Agriculturists Association, says calls from villages now carry the same themes: debt, depression, desperation. His advice is painfully thin because the options are thin: “I ask them to try to keep going. Just to keep going”.

    Even a quick reopening of the Strait of Hormuz would not immediately solve the problem. Goyal says cargo would still take one to two months to reach destinations and markets would need time to stabilise; the longer Middle Eastern production plants stay shut, the longer they will take to restart. “This problem builds in a nonlinear fashion”, she said. For farmers whose planting window is measured in days and weeks, a supply chain that recovers in months has already failed them.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    ‘We are talking about energy security for Europe’: Norway doubles down on oil and gas production | Norway | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/09/norway-oil-and-gas-production-shortages-middle-east-ukraine

    In case of any doubt about Norway’s commitment to maintain – and expand – its production of gas and oil offshore, the energy minister, Terje Aasland, has a pithy response: “We will develop, not dismantle, activity on our continental shelf.”

    This week, to the alarm of environmental campaigners, he announced that three gasfields off the country’s southern coast would reopen by the end of 2028 – nearly three decades after they closed – to meet a shortfall caused by the impact of the war in Ukraine and disruption to supplies from the Middle East.

    The decision will help keep gas and oil production at about the 2025 level – which has been stable for almost 20 years – and stay broadly the same for the rest of this decade. Norway has 97 offshore oilfields, three of which came on stream last year, and its Norwegian Offshore Directorate expects “100 and beyond” within the next two years, still producing at least the present level of 2m barrels of oil daily.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Trump’s Iran war may stymie climate gains with boost to big oil, experts say | Oil | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/07/iran-war-big-oil-climate

    The billions in profits big oil is reaping due to the Iran war may stymie the energy transition, experts and advocates fear, incentivizing oil and gas expansion and boosting the sector’s funds for political lobbying.

    “Windfall profits from Trump’s war will allow big oil to build a wall of money around its Trump-era political victories,” said Lukas Shankar-Ross, a deputy director at the green group Friends of the Earth.

    The deadly conflict in Iran has created a historic energy shock due to attacks on fossil fuel facilities and the blockage of the crucial strait of Hormuz trade route. Amid the chaos, energy prices – and oil companies’ earnings – have soared.
    MATT
    MATT --- ---
    TADEAS: ja cetl, ze na evropsky farmare to tolik nedolehne, protoze mivaji dopredu nasmlouvany produkdy za konkretni ceny. ale mozna to plati jen pro ty velky jako je bureš a jemu podobní.
    MARASAN
    MARASAN --- ---
    Evropa se jako jedinny misto na Zemi muze paradoxne ochladit, hlavne UK a Skandinavie

    A key Atlantic current is weakening. Here’s why it matters. | DW News
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4onHcgbyw8
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Fertiliser shortages will have ‘dramatic’ effect on global food prices, warns farming boss | Supply chain crisis | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/may/06/fertiliser-shortages-iran-war-global-food-prices-farming

    Fertiliser shortages caused by the Iran war have driven up costs for UK farmers by up to 70% and will have a “dramatic” impact on food prices globally next year, according to one of Britain’s most powerful property and farming companies.

    Mark Preston, executive trustee of the 349-year-old Grosvenor Group, controlled by the Duke of Westminster, said fertiliser “was already quite expensive” before the 50% to 70% surge in prices since the start of the Iran war in late February.

    The effective closure of the strait of Hormuz – which Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said on Wednesday could soon reopen – has throttled global supplies of fertiliser, crucial to growing food crops.

    Preston said that, although UK crops were unlikely to be affected this year as most fertiliser had already been used, the knock-on effect could arrive next year. “Farmers are not buying that fertiliser, they’re sitting on their hands and hoping things will improve, which they probably won’t,” he said.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Power, Overshoot, and Climate with Tad Patzek | TGS 219
    https://youtu.be/BXR94APZ31Q?si=WHCyi-LBxioPMJBD


    Many of us were taught that humans have been the dominant force shaping the modern world through sheer grit, ingenuity, and innovation. While true to an extent, there are also deep, embedded laws of energy that have both constrained and enabled human cleverness and our influence over our surroundings. What exactly are these laws, and what happened in the past few centuries that allowed for an explosion of technology and consumption? Perhaps more importantly, how can that knowledge help us understand how the decades and centuries ahead might be different?

    In this episode, Nate is joined by earth scientist and thermodynamicist Tad Patzek for a deep dive into the mathematics and physics driving humanity's energetic and material predicament. Tad walks us through the six great flows of power and materials that keep civilization running, and explains why our public conversation about all of them is dangerously detached from physical reality. He argues that planetary breakdown is not merely a side effect of an economic system built on growing these flows – it is a direct mathematical consequence of overshoot. He rounds out this picture by pointing out that every energy transition in history has been additive, not subtractive – increasing total power in the system – and the current push toward renewables is no exception.

    What if we were to truly see ourselves through the lens of all the energy we consume – for Americans, the equivalent of a 40-ton whale – would that change how we live? How do technology, population, and per capita energy consumption amplify each other, creating an exponential demand for power? And if we were to acknowledge the inseparability of our ecological crises and our energy blindness, would it help us change our behavior in accordance with the kind of world we'd want our grandchildren to inherit?
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    FB-IMG-1778104180051
    MATT
    MATT --- ---
    'Food insecurity is no longer just about low-income countries': Environmental economist explains how climate change is pushing agricultural systems to the brink | Live Science https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/climate-change/food-insecurity-is-no-longer-just-about-low-income-countries-environmental-economist-explains-how-climate-change-is-pushing-agricultural-systems-to-the-brink
    MATT
    MATT --- ---
    SHEFIK:
    Reducing air pollution has triggered something worse for the planet - Earth.com https://www.earth.com/news/reducing-air-pollution-resulted-in-less-sun-reflectivity-warmer-oceans-clean-air-paradox/
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    DZODZO: pravda. Co se tyka spotreby a konzumace, ty totalitni rezimy drzi obyvatele v udrzitelnejsi rovine :)
    DZODZO
    DZODZO --- ---
    SHEFIK: zas ta jedna rodinna chata bola blizko a tak tam clovek nemusel lietat cez pol sveta a produkovat za jednu dovolenku emisie, ktore priemerny Pygmejec v Afrike nevyprodukuje ani za rok, v tomto ohlade to bolo ekologickejsie :) dnes to mas vymenene, ze mozes vdaka levnym letenkam zajst na vikend na Korfu, ale o tom ze niekedy budes vlastnit rodinnu chatu mozes iba snivat
    N_I
    N_I --- ---
    SHEFIK: opět - to co všechno víme nám působí jiné problémy než že nás sní vlk

    jinak lidi bych nepodceňoval, to že tě sni vlk si řekli brzy také

    nechci rozporovat to, že se máme nejlépe co jsme se kdy měli
    ale na spálený zemi to je dost k ničemu, lidem co žijí na instagramu to je taky k ničemu

    a stále je strašnej mraky lidí, co se dobře nemají vůbec a skoro by jim bylo líp v jeskyni

    třeba ta nabídka potravin je strašná kašírka...když to vlastně potravina vůbec není a je to něco co tě vlastně zabíjí
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    MATT: popravde casto po praci premejslim nad praci vratnyho a rikam si, ze za sociku mel clovek na vikend volbu jedny rodinny chaty a bylo vymalovano :))

    Ale zase si na druhou stranu rikam, ze klimatickou krizi si musime odpracovat a na vratnici bych svejm detem lepsi svet nevytvoril
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    N_I: souhlasim, ja si taky nejakejma problemama z prace a dlouhodobyho nespani prosel a vim, ze je to pod tlakem okolnosti a zavazku na roky se z neceho takovyho probrat a vubec udrzet to na cem cloveku zalezi.

    ale jednak tu mame zachrannou sit ve forme socialniho/zdravotniho, jednak vime co se deje v mozku a umime s tim jako spolecnost pracovat a jednak je to o edukaci/prevenci, podobne, jako kdyz nastoupis na praci lesnika, tak se nekoho zeptas, jak se bezpecne zachazi s motorovkou.

    Jsme na tom v tomhle ohledu lip nez jeskynni muz, co nevedel, ze do nej pri bource na plani uhodi blesk, nebo byl pokousanej vlkem, casto dostal gangrenu atd. Ted je rozdil, ze zname (jako lidstvo) kauzualitu, mame obrovskou znalostni bazi a mame tedy sisrsi moznost volby delat rozhodnuti, ktere nam pomahaji prave odtrhnout se od toho spodku maaslowovy pyramidy smerem k horni casti. To, ze nekdo ty rozhodnuti nechce delat, nebo si mysli, ze se ve skole naucil vsechno a zbytek je piece of cake na to adekvatne dojizdi. To je ale uz zodpovednost jednotlivcu, ne toho, ze bychom se nemeli lip.
    N_I
    N_I --- ---
    MATT: všeobecná dostupnost potravin plnech jedů a mikroplastů....jsou to ještě potraviny?:)
    N_I
    N_I --- ---
    SHEFIK: no jednoduchy to byt muze, pri nastaveni své hlavy to zase tak slozity uplne neni:)

    rozhodne souhlasim s faktem - mysli globalne jednej lokalne, me treba staci a funguje zkratka ze v mem veku nejde uz o me ale o nase potomky a co k tomu mohu udelat ja sam...

    rozhodne souhlasim s tim ze je naprosto spatne, za vsechno muze nekdo jiny...

    covid imho nabidl tolik pohody, prave v prirode, nasem okoli, adrenalin pro ceste z hospody nebo potomci se naucili schazet v parku po skole..a online vyuce...

    sory, ale kolik lidi opravdu neví kdy je sejme vyhoření nebo težká deprese což se rovná skoro - nepřežiju zimu????
    MATT
    MATT --- ---
    SHEFIK: Hele to mi došlo až když jsem to dopsal. Ta všeobecná dostupnost potravin po celej rok asi opravdu nema obdoby (v západní civ?). A taky, že teď máš vlastně taky 100+ dnu volna. Z pohledu fyzickejch potřeb máš určitě pravdu, z pohledu psychiky by to bylo asi na dlouhou debatu a tom co si jak kdo představuje. Já jsem bohužel ten případ svázanosti ve svý hlavě a občas mam pocit, že by mi bylo nejlíp ve stavu bez těch možností vědomý volby. ;)) Těch romantizujících textů o divoších je moc.. ;)
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    N_I: zivot neni a nebude nikdy konstantni ani stabilni a uz vubec ne jednoduchy. Je to pavucina ruznych alternativ, ve kterych se muzeme pohybovat. Externi vlivy/okoli mohou byt z kratkodobeho pohledu ovlivnitelne mene, ale zpusob prozivani a reakce na externi okoli je ve velke mire v nasi moci, jen se clovek proste musi prinutit vykonat nejakou reakci, misto stezovani si.

    Vsechny tyhle diskuze jdou v duchu 'neni to jednoduche/neni to bez rizika/neni to hned => nejde to/mame se hrozne/za vsechno spatny muze nekdo jiny

    Lidi by si misto stezivani meli nastavit cil, polozit otazky, co je potreba k tomu, aby se naplnil a co ja muzu udelat pro to, aby se stal prvni/dalsi krok. Ale stezovat si, je jednodussi.

    Viz na prikladu covidu - nikdo nezakazal chodit do okolni prirody, ale vsichni si budou stezovat, ze zakaz cestovani pro all inclusive do egypta jim rozbil psychiku a buhvi co jeste. Lidi proste neumi zachazet sami se sebou, jsou zvykli na rodinu/stat/instituce, ze jim vzdy nekdo rekne co maji delat, nebo problem vyresi za ne. Jsou distancovany od reality kolem nich, ale muze za to vzdy nekdo jiny. Imho by se mela zdopovednost a pristup k ni ucit na skolach, svet by byl lepsi.

    Porad ale tyhle situace jsou na maaslowove pyramide nekde nahore, oproti drivejsimu stavu, kdy clovek opravdu nevedel, jestli bude mit co jist, jestli prezije zimu, nemoc, nebo totalitni rezim.
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam