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    TUHOKlimaticka zmena / Destroying the Future Is the Most Cost-Effective
    "Given the sheer enormity of climate change, it’s okay to be depressed, to grieve. But please, don’t stay there too long. Join me in pure, unadulterated, righteous anger."

    "I don’t want your hope. I don’t want you to be hopeful. ... I want you to act. Once you start to act, the hope is everywhere."

    "Our best scientists tell us insistently that a calamity is unfolding, that the life-support systems of the Earth are being damaged in ways that threaten our survival. Yet in the face of these facts we carry on as usual."

    Rostouci hladiny oceanu, zmena atmosferickeho proudeni, zmeny v distribuci srazek a sucha. Zmeny karbonoveho, fosforoveho a dusikoveho cyklu, okyselovani oceanu. Jake jsou bezpecnostni rizika a jake potencialni klady dramatickych zmen fungovani zemskeho systemu?
    Ale take jak funguji masove dezinformacni kampane ropneho prumyslu a boj o verejne mineni na prahu noveho klimatickeho rezimu post-holocenu.

    rozbalit záhlaví
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Europeans should learn to love the air-conditioner
    https://www.economist.com/europe/2026/06/18/europeans-should-learn-to-love-the-air-conditioner

    ❝ Americans and Europeans differ loudly on many issues, from health-care policy to gun-carrying etiquette. But a quieter division appears every summer when they visit each other’s continents. Europeans touring America complain that shops and restaurants are so frigidly air-conditioned as to require a jacket; step outside again and your glasses fog over. Yanks holidaying in Europe expect cool comfort, and grow surly on finding that many old-world buildings require them to sweat and bear it.

    The divide is rooted in both climate and culture. Long before General Electric began cooling using circulating chemicals, southern Europe was built to handle heat. In traditional houses, white paint and shaded courtyards keep things cool. Windows are thrown open and rooms aired in the mornings. Shutters keep out the midday sun, and siestas allow one to skip the hours when it is too hot to do much anyway. Europe’s southerners think coddled Americans don’t know how to cope with heat naturally. Northern Europe, meanwhile, is mostly spared the problem: June days can be cold enough for a Scandinavian knitted sweater. Flinty northern Protestants regard buying an air-conditioner for the year’s few scorchers as an expensive environmental sin.

    These days, climate change is putting such attitudes to the test. Europe is expecting a broiling summer, in part thanks to the El Niño weather event. As it is, heat contributes to around 175,000 deaths a year on the continent, the UN reckons. Yet Europeans who think first-world lifestyles are largely to blame for global warming may feel pangs of carbon guilt about equipping their houses with air-conditioning, or using it if they have it. They needn’t. The impressive build-out of renewable energy in Europe’s hottest places means that judiciously dialling down the temperature will not do much to melt the glaciers.

    Take Spain, where solar capacity has grown nearly tenfold in the past decade. Readers sweating it out in Seville can head to app.electricitymaps.com to reassure themselves: on June 10th a kilowatt-hour of Spanish electricity produced just 86 grams of CO2 equivalent. In the American state of Georgia the figure was 442. On a sunny summer day at noon, only about 10% of Spain’s electricity comes from fossil fuels; around half comes from solar. Portugal does just as well, and France better still, thanks to its dozens of nuclear reactors. Italy is a laggard, getting 30-40%of its electricity from gas. But its 224g of CO2 per kilowatt-hour is positively verdant next to much of America.

    Not all of Europe can congratulate itself. Poland remains heavily reliant on coal, making its electricity mix about as bad as America’s. Germany’s rash decision in 2011 to eliminate nuclear power left it dependent on coal and gas, producing three times as much CO2 per watt-hour as Spain. Britain, depending on the weather, falls between Italy and Iberia. There are also unexpected bright spots like Albania, which sometimes gets 100% of its electricity from hydroelectric dams. Latvia is the greenest of the Baltics, thanks to more solar power than you might expect.

    Climate morality aside, many on the old continent fret about how to pay for cranking up the aircon dial. Americans are roughly a third richer than Europeans, and to add insult to injury their household electricity costs about half as much. Even middle-class Europeans worry about a sudden bump in energy prices owing to an unexpected geopolitical crisis—say, a war in Iran.

    Yet European homes are smaller than American ones, and use about a third as much electricity on average. Moreover, the solar boom means that power is not just greener but cheaper on hot, sunny afternoons. Setting the dishwasher to run overnight (prices are generally highest around 9pm) can free up room in one’s budget to cool off the home before going to bed. Smart meters make this sort of demand-shifting easier. And astute governments offer funding to make old houses energy-efficient, which can pay for itself (provided they do not make the mistake of Italy’s “Superbonus” programme: failing to check that the renovations take place).

    The war in Iran has driven up fossil-fuel prices, but in parts of Europe (notably France and Spain) electricity bills have risen much less. That reflects smart policies. After the war in Ukraine many Europeans not only throttled their use of Russian gas, but reduced reliance on it in general. The countries that decarbonised fastest have reaped the greatest benefits. Voters might consider taking the revolutionary step of rewarding politicians who made good decisions. They are probably best equipped to bring Europe the vast expansion of power capacity it needs for the future.

    A chilling realisation

    To be sure, Europe faces an energy crunch. It must electrify industries to compete with China and expand its data centres, dwarfed by America’s, lest the artificial-intelligence revolution render it a vassal. That means better-connected electricity markets; France should let its reactors compete with Spanish solar farms. It means accelerating the build-up of battery storage, upgrading grids, and adding vastly more renewable energy. In this equation a bit more domestic air-conditioning is little more than a rounding error.

    For green politicians buffeted in recent years by falling support, a call to chill out in front of the AC may sound like surrender. That, however, is a script that ought to be flipped. It is precisely because climate-conscious governments have prodded Europe to quit fossil fuels that the continent’s electricity is becoming less harmful to the planet—and less expensive. As the world warms, Europe is heating up faster than any other region. Europeans poor and rich will be using more air conditioning, both to make lives more pleasant and in extreme cases to save them. Those who prefer to tough out the summer are free to do so. But the goal should be to make cheap, clean air-conditioning available to everyone. ❞
    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 --- ---
    pivotal as ever

    Could Santa Marta climate talks mark ground zero in push to ditch fossil fuels? | Global climate talks | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/01/could-key-climate-talks-mark-ground-zero-in-global-push-to-ditch-fossil-fuels

    the Colombian government took a bold step to shift its economy – and that of the rest of the world – away from dependence on coal, gas and oil and into a new era of clean energy. With the first ever conference on “transitioning away from fossil fuels”, the host joined nearly 60 countries determined to loosen of the grip of petrostates on the world’s future.

    “This is the beginning of a new global climate democracy,” Irene Vélez Torres, Colombia’s environment minister and chair of the talks, said in closing remarks that celebrated a “new method” of bringing together high-ambition governments, parliamentarians and civil society groups to accelerate the decarbonisation of their economies.

    At this moment in history, the conference may also mark a new global divide between “electro-democracies” and petro-dictatorships.

    The initiative has come at a pivotal moment in the climate fight. Oil and gas prices have soared since the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, the second such crisis within five years, after the price rises that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Households around the world are spiralling into debt, farmers cannot afford fertiliser and governments are remembering that a dependency on volatile fossil fuels is holding them hostage to geopolitical forces they cannot control.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    An environmental disaster in Moldova has Russia’s fingerprints all over it | Paula Erizanu | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/apr/11/environmental-disaster-moldova-russia-ukraine-war-drinking-water

    Rising from the Carpathian mountains near the Ukrainian-Polish border and flowing into the Black Sea, the Nistru provides 80% of Moldova’s drinking water. The spillage of tonnes of petrol into this body of water is therefore a national crisis. Oil slicks have been detected all the way to Dubǎsari, which more than 200 km from Naslavcea whereCojocari initially spotted pools of polluted water.
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    New book incoming

    Climate, Hydrocarbons, Sanctions: Perspectives on the Russian Arctic Hardcover – 16 April 2026

    by Arild Moe (Author), Anna Korppoo (Author)

    This timely book addresses the impact of global energy trends and rapid climate change on the Arctic’s increasing role in Russia’s hydrocarbon-based economy in the new geopolitical landscape. Arild Moe and Anna Korppoo utilise new data to provide a comprehensive understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of Russia’s Arctic development strategy and its economic underpinning, with its emphasis on hydrocarbon extraction and exports.
    Chapters analyse the potential developments that may impact Russia’s future activities in the Arctic. Key topics include scientific progress, the role of climate policy and public concerns, the economic foundation of mega-projects in the Arctic, and the repercussions of sanctions after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Moe and Korppoo offer key insights, arguing that geopolitics and the energy transition away from fossil fuels will be pressures Russia must eventually confront.
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    How Ukraine Is Turning to Renewables to Keep Heat and Lights On
    Russia continues to bomb Ukraine’s fossil-fueled power plants, leaving much of the nation shivering during a brutal winter. But Ukraine’s new emphasis on developing decentralized power — from solar panels to wind turbines — is advancing an unexpected green energy transition.
    How Ukraine Is Turning to Renewables to Keep Heat and Lights On - Yale E360
    https://e360.yale.edu/features/ukraine-war-renewable-energy
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    TADEAS: Po netu beha ovsem tohle, ale v tyhle scene se nevyznam, nevim, co si myslet...

    💙💛 Regina Laska
    @Sunnymica
    Translated from German
    Volcano Group: Nah, that wasn't us! ☝️
    That's a gamechanger.

    If the statement is genuine – and it's on Indymedia, so the right channel – then here's what we're seeing:

    ▸ The real Volcano Group from 2011 is explicitly distancing itself
    ▸ It says: "The texts and actions of recent years don't come from us"
    ▸ It reflects on the changed context since 2014 (Ukraine) – that infrastructure attacks can now become "part of a general destabilization"
    ▸ It criticizes that its name "is being used to legitimize, explain, or politically charge current attacks"


    What stands out:
    The tone. It sounds exactly like in earlier texts: reflective, self-critical, politically nuanced. They position themselves against Putin and Trump. They explain why they've withdrawn. It has intellectual substance.

    The key sentence:
    "With Russia's attack on Ukraine in 2014, the context fundamentally shifted."
    That's an analysis no Russian troll would ever write.

    Why only now?
    They've stayed silent because they've seen that infrastructure sabotage since 2014 exists in a completely different context. That someone – presumably Russia – might have co-opted their methods and name to carry out destabilization.

    And they didn't want to:
    ▸ Be part of it
    ▸ Legitimize it through their own actions
    ▸ Provide a stage for it

    The problem:

    Their silence is exactly what enabled what they wanted to prevent – someone else hijacked their name.

    The uncomfortable implication:
    If that's true, then the attacks from 2018, 2021, 2024, 2025, and now 2026 – so over a decade – weren't from them.
    That would mean: The domestic intelligence service has been chasing a group for years that no longer existed in that form. And possibly classified Russian operations as "left-wing extremism."
    That would be a failure on multiple levels.
    The question remains: Can they substantiate that? Or is it just their claim against the authorities'?

    And of course: This statement could theoretically be forged too. The question is just – who would have an interest in faking a disavowal?

    That makes the false-flag theory more plausible, not less.

    Dobrindt has a problem now.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Revealed: Europe’s water reserves drying up due to climate breakdown | Water | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/nov/29/climate-crisis-depleting-europe-groundwater-reserves-analysis

    The findings reveal a stark imbalance: the north and north-west of Europe – particularly Scandinavia, parts of the UK and Portugal – have been getting wetter, while large swathes of the south and south-east, including parts of the UK, Spain, Italy, France, Switzerland, Germany, Romania and Ukraine, have been drying out.
    SCHWEPZ
    SCHWEPZ --- ---
    British petroleum varuje ;)

    BP predicts higher oil and gas demand, suggesting world will not hit 2050 net zero target | BP | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/sep/25/bp-oil-and-gas-clean-energy-ukraine-middle-east-tariffs
    Poptávka po ropě a plynu roste. Klimatické cíle jsou v ohrožení, varuje BP - Novinky
    https://www.novinky.cz/clanek/ekonomika-poptavka-po-rope-a-plynu-roste-klimaticke-cile-jsou-v-ohrozeni-varuje-bp-40540756

    Evropský cíl dosáhnout nulových emisí do roku 2050 je v ohrožení. Nejistota vyvolaná válkami a obchodními konflikty tlačí státy zpět k ropě a plynu, varuje britská energetická společnost BP. Důvodem jsou nejen konflikty na Ukrajině a Blízkém východě, ale také otřesy na světových trzích způsobené celní politikou amerického prezidenta Donalda Trumpa.

    Ve své nejnovější prognóze BP zdůrazňuje zpomalení přechodu na čistou energii, napsal britský list The Guardian. Konec využívání fosilních paliv je jedním z kroků k dosažení klimatické neutrality do roku 2050, na které se dohodly státy Evropské unie. Za 25 let tak mohou vypouštět jen tolik emisí, kolik planeta zvládne pohltit.

    Pozorně sledovaná výroční zpráva britského energetického kolosu nyní odhaduje, že světová spotřeba ropy by měla v roce 2050 dosáhnout 83 milionů barelů denně. To je zhruba o osm procent víc oproti předchozímu odhadu 77 milionů. V současné době se denní globální spotřeba ropy se pohybuje kolem 100 milionů barelů

    AI summary:
    BP is currently scaling back its green initiatives and pivoting back towards oil and gas production, having abandoned aggressive climate targets set in 2020, despite a recent announcement of its new strategy in March 2025 aiming to "reimagine energy for people and our planet". However, this new plan involves increased oil and gas output and has been met with criticism from climate activists and analysts who believe it undermines true decarbonization efforts.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    TADEAS:
    TADEAS:

    Destruction of Ukraine dam caused ‘toxic timebomb’ of heavy metals, study finds | Ukraine | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/mar/13/destruction-of-ukraine-kakhovka-dam-caused-toxic-timebomb-in-rivers-study-finds
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Martin AbelMartin Abel
    Navigating the metacrisis with pessimism of the intellect and optimism of the will.

    📅 From now on, EU Member States have less than 1 year to identify renewables acceleration areas (hashtag#RAAs).

    Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the EU decided to further boost the clean energy transition by designating low-conflict areas with extra easy permitting procedure for the renewables. The hashtag#red3 directive gave states until 21.02.2026.

    🤔 With some delay, NGOs, consultancies and finally the European Commission itself started to issue guidelines on how to complete this unprecedented task. Now, many Member States had already identified priority areas before, but a few if any were ready (and indeed allowed) to drop the thorough assessment of individual projects (incl. EIA). Unfortunately, none of those guidelines really explains how to do it on the technical level.

    🪰 The fly in the ointment is - as almost ever - the resources. Not € as much as people. With the ongoing brain drain in the public sector (particularly in CEE and southern states), even the willing governments find it challenging to find the experts for the job. Nowhere is the problem more tangible than in biological site assessments. The EU law says: choose RAAs, you have 2.5 years. But the EU law also says: whatever you choose, send authorised professionals there to survey the area. And one need not be an expert to understand that 1000s km2 cannot possibly be all surveyed in a year - there is just not enough people.

    ⚖️ With the hashtag#red3 deadline approaching, most EU countries must choose which directive they are going to abide by and, in effect, whether to prioritise the speed of the transition or the integrity of the biosphere on site. And hey, before you exclaim that the world is burning and we need those renewables to replace the the fossil fuels and lower our dependence on Russia, consider that globally the renewables have done little to squeeze out (but rather supplemented) the fossil energy so far and that the biosphere needs to be respected now more than ever.

    So... what would you do?

    I'm happy I could work on the topic in CZ with colleagues from Ministerstvo životního prostředí and Výzkumný ústav pro krajinu, v. v. i. and I'm certainly looking forward to discussing these issues at ESEW in Brussels this June.
    PER2
    PER2 --- ---
    onovitelne zdroje ve valce
    Ukraine has seen success in building clean energy, which is harder for Russia to destroy | AP News
    https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-clean-renewable-energy-russian-bombing-distributed-1f226213742cc057f9f65208167e6f38

    Attacks on two DTEK solar farms last spring are a good example. They destroyed many solar panels and some of the transformers, which step up voltage for long distances or step it down for use in homes. Replacing the transformers and swapping out destroyed panels allowed the farms, which generate 400 megawatts, to be back up in seven days.

    Timchenko said an attack on a thermal generating station, which experienced a similar amount of damage, took three to four months to rebuild.

    “That’s the difference between centralized and so-called decentralized generation. It’s much more resistant and difficult to destroy,” said Timchenko.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    Russia-Ukraine war live: Moscow claims advance in Ukraine’s east has ‘accelerated’ | Ukraine | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2024/nov/23/russia-ukraine-war-live-latest-news-updates

    Russia has included the territories it occupies in Ukraine in its recent greenhouse gas inventory report to the United Nations, drawing protests from Ukrainian officials and activists at the Cop29 climate summit this week.

    ...

    “We see that Russia is using international platforms to legalise their actions, to legalise their occupation of our territory,” Ukraine’s deputy environment minister Olga Yukhymchuk told Reuters.

    She said Ukraine is in touch with officials from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the U.N.’s main climate body, to ask it to resolve the dispute.

    Officials representing the Russian foreign ministry and the UNFCCC did not respond to requests for comment sent on Thursday.

    At issue is Russia’s National Inventory Report of greenhouse gas emissions for 2022, which Moscow submitted to the UNFCCC on 8 November. In the submission, reviewed by Reuters, Russia said it could only provide data for 85 out of 89 of its territories “due to the absence of baseline data on land use for the territories of the Donetsk People’s Republic, Luhansk People’s Republic, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, annexed in September 2022.”

    Russia had already included emissions from Ukraine’s Crimea region, annexed in 2014, in its last few reporting submissions to the UNFCCC. It also included Crimea’s land development plans in a report to the UN Global Biodiverity Framework in 2020.

    Ukrainian environment minister Svitlana Grynchuk raised the issue in a speech to delegates at the Cop29 summit earlier this week, saying Russia’s reporting on Ukraine territories undermines the integrity of global climate efforts.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    ‘Everything is dead’: Ukraine rushes to stem ecocide after river poisoning | Ukraine | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/01/ukraine-seim-river-poisoning-chernihiv-ecocide-

    Serhiy Zhuk, the head of Chernihiv’s ecology inspectorate, described what had happened as an act of Russian ecocide. “The Desna was one of our cleanest rivers. It’s a very big catastrophe,” he said. Zhuk traced the slick’s route on a map pinned to his office wall: a looping multi-week journey along the Seym and Desna. “More than 650km is polluted. Not a single organism survived. This is unprecedented. It’s Europe’s first completely dead river,” he said.
    SHEFIK
    SHEFIK --- ---
    Z cyklu #doomed

    BP imposes hiring freeze and halts new offshore wind projects | BP | The Guardian
    https://amp.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jun/27/bp-imposes-hiring-freeze-and-halts-new-offshore-wind-projects

    New boss Murray Auchincloss reverses move away from fossil fuels, which had weighed on company’s share price

    The head of BP has imposed a hiring freeze and halted new offshore wind projects, in an apparent attempt to placate investors who are unhappy with the oil company’s green targets.
    ...
    Looney, who had committed BP to some of the industry’s greenest climate goals, was ousted last September for failing to disclose relationships with colleagues.

    The decision to slow BP’s green ambitions has stoked concerns that Looney’s plan to move the company away from fossil fuels, with a pledge to “become a net zero company by 2050 or sooner”, may soon be derailed.

    BP has come under pressure from shareholders over its green targets because some renewable projects have proved more costly than expected, and profits from oil and gas have soared after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine more than two years ago.

    In response, the company set out plans earlier this year to cut oil and gas production by just 25% between 2019 and 2030 – well short of its previous target of a 40% reduction over the same timeframe.
    ...
    Earlier this month BP’s rival Shell set out its own plans to scale back its green growth ambitions, reducing the number of staff working on low-carbon solutions by about 200 roles while shifting the focus towards high-profit oil projects and expanding its gas business.
    VOYTEX
    VOYTEX --- ---
    PAN_SPRCHA:"A že bychom se měli bát Ruského útoku na jadernou elektrárnu je absurdní, vždyť by se to rovnalo jadernému útoku a Rusko jaderné zbraně má."

    Nevim, kdes byl posledni 2 roky, ale tohle se stalo letos v dubnu: 3 prime zasahy UAV do kontejnentu Zapor. JE
    A predtim xkrat po ostrelovani beh prim. chlazeni na jedinej poruchovej agregat, s dochazejici naftou a zmlacenou zajatou obsluhou.

    https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/07/europe/russian-controlled-zaporizhzhia-nuclear-reactor-damaged-following-drone-attack/index.html
    The drone attack included three direct hits against the facility’s main reactor containment, the agency’s director-general, Rafael Grossi, said on X.

    a tomuhle verili US zpravodajci (kteri jedini spravne varovali UA a svet tesne pred invazi):
    https://www.cnn.com/2024/03/09/politics/us-prepared-rigorously-potential-russian-nuclear-strike-ukraine/index.html
    In late 2022, the US began “preparing rigorously” for Russia potentially striking Ukraine with a nuclear weapon

    %%%

    'Německá veřejnost si opravdu autenticky přála ukončit provoz JE. Právě pod vlivem Ruskem řízené propagandy. '

    Presne tuhle odpoved jsem cekal, ale nechtel jsem predbihat. Takze prosim tvou domenku podloz dukazy, ze Nemci, kteri v DDR zalozili prvni protijaderna hnuti v Evrope, byli uspesne zmanipulovani Ruskem k Atomausstieg a nejednali z vlastniho usudku.
    TADEAS
    TADEAS --- ---
    J Pecho

    Včera popadalo v Európe veľa teplotných rekordov. Hodnoty niektorých nových sú doslova šialené!

    35 Torregrotta ITALY
    33 Montana BULGARIA
    31.8 Negotin SERBIA
    31.6 Tirana ALBANIA
    31 Focsani ROMANIA
    30.2 Kelebia HUNGARY
    30.2 Bravicea MOLDOVA
    30.1 Osijek CROATIA
    29.3 Mohyliv UKRAINE
    28.5 Vienna AUSTRIA
    27.6 Cerklje SLOVENIA

    FB-IMG-1712075233385
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Germany is a case study — perhaps the case study — of a Western middle power which made a strategic bet on a full embrace of interdependence and globalization in the late 20th century: it outsourced its security to the U.S., its export-led growth to China, and its energy needs to Russia. It is now finding itself excruciatingly vulnerable in an early 21st century characterized by great power competition and an increasing weaponization of interdependence by allies and adversaries alike. The war in Ukraine, which touches on almost every one of Germany’s bilateral, regional, and global interests, only accentuates its exposure. That this horrific conflict is taking place in the region that was part of the “Bloodlands” (the term coined by Yale historian Timothy Snyder), where Hitler and (to a lesser degree) Stalin murdered tens of millions of people is lost on few of my fellow citizens.

    For much of the three decades after German reunification in 1990, Berlin saw Moscow (as well as Beijing) as a reliable strategic partner in a two-way bargain: Germany would import cheap energy, and export good governance in much the way that Eastern Europe had been transformed through entry into NATO and the EU. Ultimately, German policymakers hoped, this would transform not only these countries’ economies but also their political systems. And they believed — in an attempt to reconfigure West Germany’s Cold War Ostpolitik for a united Germany in the middle of Europe — that NATO and the European Union could and should be encompassed in a pan-European security architecture that included Russia.

    The Kremlin, for its part, saw Germany as a friend, a partner, and as a strategic bridgehead into Europe — not least because it was importing roughly a third of its oil and gas from Russia. What the Germans called their “modernization partnership” with Moscow made for excellent business for a while; but in every other way, it proved to be a failure. Economic integration turned out to be strictly downstream, while many German businesses got burned by corruption and organized crime; political reform remained elusive.

    Putin’s war and European energy security: A German perspective on decoupling from Russian fossil fuels | Brookings
    https://www.brookings.edu/articles/putins-war-and-european-energy-security-a-german-perspective-on-decoupling-from-russian-fossil-fuels/
    TUHO
    TUHO --- ---
    Zajimavej report na geopoliticky implikace tajici Arktidy...

    Climate change is already affecting geopolitics, and countries are adapting their geopolitical strategies to take account of anticipated future climate change. Russia is leading in this regard, explicitly integrating climate change forecasts into its economic and national security strategies. Vladimir Putin has signaled that he sees the Arctic as an essential resource base and military stronghold for Russia in the decades ahead. Putin also seems to believe that unexploited hydrocarbon resources in the Arctic will be crucial for Russia’s economic future post-Ukraine. Scientists and industry participants are skeptical that this plan will succeed, but the exit of Western firms has removed pressure on Russian policymakers and firms to guard against Arctic environmental risks. Russian activity is increasing the probability of Arctic environmental disasters in the years ahead, including oil spills and radiological leakage.

    The United States and its Arctic allies and partners cannot ignore Russia’s actions. As the war in Ukraine still rages, a future military confrontation between Russia and NATO in the Arctic cannot be ruled out. NATO faces the challenge of how to strengthen its defense structures and increase the frequency and scope of Arctic exercises without risking misperceptions and accidents that lead to conflict with Russia. Moscow’s diplomatic isolation and economic weakness may also force it to grant China a greater role in the development of the Northern Sea Route.



    The Geopolitics of Climate Change: Scenarios and Pathways for Arctic 2050 | Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
    https://www.belfercenter.org/publication/geopolitics-climate-change-scenarios-and-pathways-arctic-2050
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