the watcher Posted October 31, 2021 Report Posted October 31, 2021 An interesting read. I agree with much of it. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/oct/30/capitalism-is-killing-the-planet-its-time-to-stop-buying-into-our-own-destruction Tracker 1
Wideleft Posted November 4, 2021 Report Posted November 4, 2021 Yet another impact of climate change I hadn't considered and is happening now - in the cradle of civilization. As heat and drought reduces river runoff to oceans (and oceans get higher because of glacial melt), the salt-water pushes inland, killing marshes, cropland and soil that populations rely on. FROM CRADLE TO GRAVE Where civilization emerged between the Tigris and Euphrates, climate change is poisoning the land and emptying the villages "No one lives here anymore. The mud-brick buildings are empty, just husks of the human life that became impossible on this land. Wind whips through bone-dry reeds. For miles, there’s no water to be seen. Carved from an ancient land once known as Mesopotamia, Iraq is home to the cradle of civilization — the expanse between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers where the first complex human communities emerged. But as climate change produces extreme warming and water grows scarcer around the Middle East, the land here is drying up. Across Iraq’s south, there is a sense of an ending. Dozens of farming villages are abandoned, but for an isolated family here and there. The intrusion of saltwater is poisoning lands that have been passed for generations from fathers to sons. The United Nations recently estimated that more than 100 square miles of farmland a year are being lost to desert. Years of below-average rainfall have left Iraqi farmers more dependent than ever on the dwindling waters of the Tigris and Euphrates. But upstream, Turkey and Iran have dammed their own waterways in the past two years, further weakening the southern flow, so a salty current from the Persian Gulf now pushes northward and into Iraq’s rivers. The salt has reached as far as the northern edge of Basra, some 85 miles inland. In the historic marshes, meanwhile, men are clinging to what remains of life as they knew it, as their buffaloes die and their wives and children scatter across nearby cities, no longer able to stand the summer heat. Temperatures in Iraq topped a record 125 degrees this summer with aid groups warning that drought was limiting access to food, water and electricity for 12 million people here and in neighboring Syria. With Iraq warming faster than much of the globe, this is a glimpse of the world’s future." ..... https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/interactive/2021/iraq-climate-change-tigris-euphrates/ Tracker and blue_gold_84 1 1
Wideleft Posted November 23, 2021 Report Posted November 23, 2021 (edited) Another great climate-related article from the Post discussing how water shortages and prior water mismanagement are causing conflict between First Nations, First Nations, farmers, homeowners, wildlife and wildlife refuges. (lots of snippets provided) https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/interactive/2021/klamath-river-basin-drought/?itid=hp_Climate box Climate change fuels a water rights conflict built on over a century of broken promises By Nick Kirkpatrick, Laris Karklis, James Cornsilk, Mason Trinca and Alice Li Nov. 22, 2021 The simple way to think about this crisis: There’s no longer enough water to go around to meet the needs of farmers and Native American populations as well as fish and birds. For more than a century, the federal government has overseen an intricate and imperfect system of water distribution intended to sustain an ecosystem and an economy. The whole precarious balance was based on the assumption that enough snow would always fall, and melt, and fill the vast watershed of the Klamath River Basin, which straddles the border of California and Oregon and is home to about 124,000 people. But this year, the region buckled under one of the worst droughts ever recorded. For the first time in more than a century, the region is so parched that the Bureau of Reclamation, which allocates water, has distributed none. No water for farmers, who grow alfalfa that feeds cattle in China, peppermint for tea exported to Europe, and potatoes used by Frito-Lay and In-N-Out Burger. No water for the fish sacred to the Klamath Tribes, who revere the Lost River sucker, shortnose sucker and other species as central to their survival. No water for migratory birds, who rest and breed at two diminished wildlife refuges along the Pacific Flyway. And no water for hundreds of people who live around the Klamath Project. Their wells have run dry. The extreme effects of climate-related drought have worsened a long-existing conflict between Native Americans and farmers and ranchers, all fighting for the resource essential to their survival. The C’waam and Koptu fish essential to tribal culture once numbered in the tens of millions; now there are about 3,400 left in the wild, Gonyaw said. The young don’t live long enough to reproduce because of poor water quality in the Upper Klamath Lake. Unrestricted cattle grazing upstream releases phosphorus into the lake, and as water levels fall due to irrigation, the concentration of contaminants kills the fish, Gonyaw said. Development along the shores of the lake has also upset the balance. Without wetlands to filter out the contaminants, toxic algae thrives, ultimately suffocating the juvenile fish. The Klamath, Yurok, Karuk, Hoopa Valley, Modoc and Yahooskin tribes all lived in the region, sustained by food in wetlands. The U.S. War Department sent surveyors John C. Fremont and Kit Carson to explore the Pacific territories for westward expansion. The group killed Native Americans as they moved north; expedition member Thomas E. Breckenridge wrote that the men “had orders while in camp or on the move to shoot Indians on sight. While on the march the crack of a rifle and the dying yell of a native was not an unusual occurrence.” In 1864, the federal government and the tribes signed a treaty that transferred more than 20 million acres of native land in exchange for their right to hunt, fish and live on 1.5 million acres of reservation land. The decades of subjugation were punctuated in 1954 by Congress terminating the tribes’ federal recognition and buying the reservation land, which became national forest and logging acreage. The government had promised fishing rights and water forever to the tribes. But it also promised irrigation water forever to the overwhelmingly White farmers of the basin, who enjoyed political support, said Hannah Gosnell, an Oregon State University geography professor. The dueling promises have been in conflict for more than a century. Over the past decade, however, the tribes have won court approval to begin enforcing the water rights first established in that original 1864 treaty. “The tables are turning now,” Gosnell said. “The power dynamics are changing, and it’s really hard for the irrigators to come to terms with.” Across the California line, over half of the juvenile Chinook salmon born on the Klamath River this year have died of disease. In a normal year, freshwater from the lake flows downstream and west and improves the health of the Klamath River. This year, the Bureau of Reclamation prevented that outflow of water, called a “flushing flow,” to protect the Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker in Upper Klamath Lake. “If we don’t have the Klamath River and we don’t have healthy fish runs, it’s really hard to be a Yurok person,” said Barry McCovey, the tribe’s fishery department director. “It’s just as important to our people as the air that we breathe.” Scott Seus is a third-generation farmer who mainly grows horseradish and peppermint. His season started late, and every day has been a struggle. “There isn’t anything easy this year,” he said. “We’re having to work for every ounce of existence.” He’s growing only about 40 percent of his land this year, although he still needs to pay water fees to maintain the other 60 percent. The crops he has grown this year are not as large or as green. “There’ll come a point here,” he said, “where we may have to make some hard decisions that might include walking away from fields.” Back then, “it seemed like the water supplies were endless, so it really wasn’t for several decades that anyone started to realize,” said Todd Kepple, director of the Klamath County Museum, “we may not have enough water here to keep everyone whole.” After the 2001 drought, the federal Bureau of Reclamation withheld water from farmers to preserve the Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker protected under the Endangered Species Act. The agency based its decision on two federal biological studies that identified a minimum water level necessary for the species’s health. Protests erupted, and Native Americans were hung in effigy, Gosnell said. During one rally, a brigade passed buckets filled with water from Upper Klamath Lake, dumping it into the main canal that feeds the project. Eventually, farmers had enough with symbolic protests. They stormed the canal head gates and pried them open with a crowbar, releasing water into the project. U.S. Marshals were called in to contain the conflict, and the bureau eventually buckled, allotting some water to the farmers. In August, the federal government announced $15 million in drought relief for agricultural producers in the basin. Both Gallup and Seus point out that the farmers are not the only people suffering. They mention their employees and the trickle-down effect on local businesses and charitable organizations. The water deficit goes a lot deeper than the farmers and the fish, Gallup said. “Right now, there is no winner,” he said. “Everyone’s losing.” Also suffering are wildlife whose protected habitats rely on Klamath Project water. The national wildlife refuges at Tule Lake and Lower Klamath are home to tens of thousands of waterfowl and are major stops for migratory birds on the Pacific Flyway. In normal years, runoff from water allocated to irrigators replenishes the refuges. This year, the refuges received no water from the project, and parts of the Tule Lake refuge were bone-dry and cracked after an emergency diversion of water. Last year, more than 60,000 birds died of botulism in one of the worst outbreaks in years. This year, nearly all the ducks have vanished from the Lower Klamath refuge, the first migratory bird refuge established in the country. A recent aerial survey by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service of the vast preserve showed about 35,000 ducks this year compared with 1.5 million in 1948. The nearby Tule Lake refuge had only about 30,000 ducks in the survey, down from 3.5 million. The water demands of the entire region are so complex that solving one deficit creates several more someplace else. Kelsey and Nathan Steinberg woke up one morning in early July without running water — their aging well ran dry. That week, they said, three of their neighbors experienced the same. Officials received hundreds of calls about wells gone dry between July and October. Recent powerful rainstorms in the West have barely made a dent, officials said. As is in nature, everything is interconnected. “Without a restored ecosystem, nobody gets anything,” Gosnell said. “Nobody wins.” But, she said, restoration is only part of the solution. The physical challenges can’t be overcome without addressing the human ones. Part of that, Gosnell said, is returning land to the tribes. The recent $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill provides $160 million for Fish and Wildlife to fund efforts over five years to protect and restore the habitats of the Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker as well as salmon in the Klamath River. While relief and restoration efforts have long punctuated the Klamath conflict, no single investment of this scale has been made before. Edited November 23, 2021 by Wideleft JCon, blue_gold_84 and Tracker 2 1
blue_gold_84 Posted November 23, 2021 Report Posted November 23, 2021 https://www.euronews.com/next/2021/11/12/europe-must-ban-bitcoin-mining-to-hit-the-1-5c-paris-climate-goal-say-swedish-regulators Quote Faced with a sharp rise in energy consumption, Swedish authorities are calling on the European Union to ban "energy intensive" crypto mining. Erik Thedéen, director of the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority, and Björn Risinger, director of the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency, said cryptocurrency's rising energy usage is threatening Sweden's ability to meet its obligations under the Paris Climate Agreement. Between April and August this year, the energy consumption of Bitcoin mining in the Nordic country rose "several hundred per cent," and now consumes the equivalent electricity of 200,000 households, Thedéen and Risinger said. "It is currently possible to drive a mid-size electric car 1.8 million kilometres using the same energy it takes to mine one single Bitcoin,” they said. “This is the equivalent of forty-four laps around the globe. 900 bitcoins are mined every day. This is not a reasonable use of our renewable energy". Tracker and Wideleft 1 1
FrostyWinnipeg Posted November 25, 2021 Report Posted November 25, 2021 Golfers can soon expect a greener ride through city-run courses. Next year, the entire fleet of carts at Winnipeg’s three municipally operated golf courses will be replaced with electric models. The city is now seeking a company to supply the environmentally friendly vehicles through leases from April 1, 2022, until Oct. 31, 2025, which could be extended for up to two years. Tracker, WildPath and Wideleft 3
FrostyWinnipeg Posted December 10, 2021 Report Posted December 10, 2021 (edited) https://winnipeg.ctvnews.ca/new-solar-glass-manufacturing-facility-coming-to-selkirk-first-of-its-kind-in-north-america-1.5701643 @wanna-b-fanboy Need to retitle this thread to The Environment Thread as no one knows what Anthropogenic is 😝 Edited December 10, 2021 by FrostyWinnipeg Wanna-B-Fanboy and Tracker 1 1
WildPath Posted December 10, 2021 Report Posted December 10, 2021 (edited) 8 minutes ago, FrostyWinnipeg said: https://winnipeg.ctvnews.ca/new-solar-glass-manufacturing-facility-coming-to-selkirk-first-of-its-kind-in-north-america-1.5701643 Need to retitle this thread to The Environment Thread. Also no one knows what Anthropogenic is 😝 This sounds great, but if you learn more about CanWhite Sands, they might not seem so glorious. There has been some shady and underhanded stuff going on as far as being able to bypass provincial environmental reviews. The PCs have finally caved and announced an environmental review, but have refused public hearings as part of the review. There is real danger that this project could contaminate the largest aquifer in Manitoba - the Sandilands aquifer. Stefanson has basically announced Manitoba is going full steam ahead on mining projects and I have a strong suspicion that the environmental review will be done by "consultants" friendly to the advancement of this project. The same thing as former Sask Premier Brad Wall being the "independent" hired consultant that recommended privatization of hydro. There are many articles in the Free Press on this, but they are behind a paywall, so I won't post them. https://ppeondemandgroup.newshubbadmin.com/former-canwhite-employee-alleges-well-contamination-lax-site-safety/ Edited December 10, 2021 by WildPath Tracker and blue_gold_84 2
blue_gold_84 Posted December 16, 2021 Report Posted December 16, 2021 https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/top-10-weather-stories-2021-1.6288139 Quote Environment Canada has released its Top 10 weather stories for 2021 — a year that its senior climatologist Dave Phillips calls the "most destructive, the most expensive and the deadliest year for weather in Canadian history." Though this is the 26th year that Phillips has created the list, he said: "No year compared to this year." "The events are bigger and badder and more impactful now than they were just 20 years ago," he said. While scientists have been raising the alarm over climate change for decades, in the past, it has appeared gradual, subtle and distant, Phillips said. "I think this is the year that Canadians saw it firsthand." The trend over the past 26 years also shows this is a preview of what we need to expect more of and adapt to, he said. "I think that we need to consider this as a dry run, a dress rehearsal, of what we're going to see more of in the future." JCon 1
JCon Posted December 16, 2021 Report Posted December 16, 2021 10 minutes ago, blue_gold_84 said: https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/top-10-weather-stories-2021-1.6288139 I'm sure it's probably nothing, everything will be fine.
FrostyWinnipeg Posted December 29, 2021 Report Posted December 29, 2021 https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/doomsday-glacier-thwaites-antarctica-climate-crisis-1273841/
FrostyWinnipeg Posted January 27, 2022 Report Posted January 27, 2022 https://www.ctvnews.ca/climate-and-environment/study-gas-stoves-worse-for-climate-than-previously-thought-1.5756897 Tracker and Wideleft 1 1
Mark F Posted January 31, 2022 Report Posted January 31, 2022 (edited) .Wayne completed the crossing from Los Angeles, CA to New York City, NY covering 2,834.5 miles in a 2021 Porsche Taycan with a cumulative charge time of just 2-hours, 26-minutes, and 48-seconds. Wayne said: “Comparing charging performance from of variety of EVs I have driven to date, the Taycan sets the bar. The first time I charged on a 350KW charger, 6 to 82 percent occurred in just 22-minutes. Like all GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS attempts, we are required to meet a daunting set of requirements, including meticulously noting every stop – with independent witnesses for each charge. Every mile covered was filmed, GPS tracked and accounted for before being certified by a panel of adjudicators before the record was accepted. As noted above, the car selected was a standard 2021 Taycan equipped with the Performance Battery and the Premium Package including Adaptive Cruise Control and Porsche’s Electric Sport Sound. http://www.cleanmpg.com/community/index.php?threads/56827/ also "South Australia, thanks to its good resources and a government that made it clear it would welcome investment in renewables, leads the way with the a world-topping 62.5 per cent share for wind and solar (as a percentage of local demand) in the last 12 months. South Australia has already delivered a week long period where wind and solar delivered more than local demand, and it is expected to reach “net 100 per cent” renewables (calculated over a year), well ahead of the official state target of 2030." Edited January 31, 2022 by Mark F Tracker 1
Mark F Posted February 3, 2022 Report Posted February 3, 2022 https://www.stand.earth/latest/Canada-climate-energy/canadas-climate-leadership/environmental-organizations-sue-premier THURSDAY FEBRUARY 03, 2022 VANCOUVER, BC, EDMONTON, AB, TORONTO and OTTAWA, ON, Feb. 3, 2022 - Environmental groups Environmental Defence, West Coast Environmental Law, Stand.earth, Dogwood and the Wilderness Committee have launched legal proceedings against Alberta Premier Jason Kenney and the Alberta government for defamatory statements that directly contradicted the findings of the final report of the Public Inquiry into Anti-Alberta Energy Campaigns. The suit was filed after Premier Kenney and the Alberta government refused to retract statements and issue an apology. JCon, Tracker and WildPath 3
JCon Posted February 4, 2022 Report Posted February 4, 2022 17 hours ago, Mark F said: https://www.stand.earth/latest/Canada-climate-energy/canadas-climate-leadership/environmental-organizations-sue-premier THURSDAY FEBRUARY 03, 2022 VANCOUVER, BC, EDMONTON, AB, TORONTO and OTTAWA, ON, Feb. 3, 2022 - Environmental groups Environmental Defence, West Coast Environmental Law, Stand.earth, Dogwood and the Wilderness Committee have launched legal proceedings against Alberta Premier Jason Kenney and the Alberta government for defamatory statements that directly contradicted the findings of the final report of the Public Inquiry into Anti-Alberta Energy Campaigns. The suit was filed after Premier Kenney and the Alberta government refused to retract statements and issue an apology. Conservatives lie with impunity. Example 1,549. WildPath, Mark F, blue_gold_84 and 1 other 2 2
Mark F Posted February 8, 2022 Report Posted February 8, 2022 (edited) Wonder when leaders will realize, need to do something. https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2022/01/third-costliest-year-on-record-for-weather-disasters-in-2021-343-billion-in-damages/ "Earth was besieged by a remarkable 47 billion-dollar weather disasters in 2021, and the total damage wrought by weather disasters was $329 billion, making 2021 the third-costliest year on record (adjusted for inflation) for weather-related disasters, said insurance broker Aon in its annual report issued January 25. The only costlier years for weather-related disasters were 2017 ($519 billion) and 2005 ($351 billion), according to Aon. Munich RE has 2021 tied with 2005 and 2011 as the second-costliest year on record for insured losses from natural disasters, with only 2017 being more expensive." we all pay this bill in various ways. Edited February 8, 2022 by Mark F blue_gold_84 1
WildPath Posted February 8, 2022 Report Posted February 8, 2022 1 hour ago, Mark F said: Wonder when leaders will realize, need to do something. https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2022/01/third-costliest-year-on-record-for-weather-disasters-in-2021-343-billion-in-damages/ "Earth was besieged by a remarkable 47 billion-dollar weather disasters in 2021, and the total damage wrought by weather disasters was $329 billion, making 2021 the third-costliest year on record (adjusted for inflation) for weather-related disasters, said insurance broker Aon in its annual report issued January 25. The only costlier years for weather-related disasters were 2017 ($519 billion) and 2005 ($351 billion), according to Aon. Munich RE has 2021 tied with 2005 and 2011 as the second-costliest year on record for insured losses from natural disasters, with only 2017 being more expensive." we all pay this bill in various ways. The leaders definitely realize it and it is probably the main motivation behind the half-assed efforts that are underway. The problem is, one country can't fix climate it for itself. So much easier to excuse damaging actions that will reinforce a high-carbon economy and point to another country saying that they are doing nothing. Diffusion of responsibility big time here and I just don't see us doing enough as a planet in time. Mark F 1
Tracker Posted February 8, 2022 Report Posted February 8, 2022 2 hours ago, WildPath said: The leaders definitely realize it and it is probably the main motivation behind the half-assed efforts that are underway. The problem is, one country can't fix climate it for itself. So much easier to excuse damaging actions that will reinforce a high-carbon economy and point to another country saying that they are doing nothing. Diffusion of responsibility big time here and I just don't see us doing enough as a planet in time. The biggest problem is that the biggest polluters have little to no financial incentive to change. They are all about the greatest immediate financial return to their investors and, by extension, their salaries and bonuses. WildPath and Mark F 2
Mark F Posted February 8, 2022 Report Posted February 8, 2022 2 hours ago, Tracker said: The biggest problem is that the biggest polluters have little to no financial incentive to change. They are all about the greatest immediate financial return to their investors and, by extension, their salaries and bonuses. Yup .... current corporate culture is strictly how much can I squeeze out of this for myself, before it is worthless.
Tracker Posted February 8, 2022 Report Posted February 8, 2022 6 minutes ago, Mark F said: Yup .... current corporate culture is strictly how much can I squeeze out of this for myself, before it is worthless. There are a couple of European countries which mandate that all bonuses have to to paid out of future earnings. WildPath and Mark F 2
blue_gold_84 Posted February 9, 2022 Report Posted February 9, 2022 https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/ocean-hottest-on-record-1.6342636 Quote Amid another record warm year for the planet, one of the most dramatic and alarming changes occurred in our oceans, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). They are the warmest they've been in recorded history. In fact, the ocean heat has been topping its own record annually for the past seven years, with last year's record set despite the absence of El Niño — a warming in part of the Pacific Ocean that tends to drive up global temperatures. While many Canadians — most of whom are land-locked — may not be focused on the state of our world's oceans, people across the globe will be affected by the changes happening in them: species of marine life moving out of their typical regions and into others, creating an imbalance in aquatic life; a rise in sea levels; warmer waters that can add fuel to already powerful hurricanes and changes in our food webs.
blue_gold_84 Posted February 17, 2022 Report Posted February 17, 2022 https://www.carbonbrief.org/oil-majors-not-walking-the-talk-on-climate-action-study-confirms Quote Four of the world’s largest oil-and-gas companies are failing to back their words and pledges on climate change with genuine action and investment, a new study says. Mentions of climate change and low-carbon energy have roughly tripled in annual reports from Chevron, ExxonMobil, BP and Shell over the past decade. But even as these firms issue pledges to cut emissions and invest in renewables, the study concludes that such a transition is simply “not occurring” as all four companies continue to focus primarily on producing fossil fuels. The study, published in PLOS ONE, comes in the wake of record profits for the fossil fuel industry as the global energy crisis bumps up oil-and-gas prices. Mark F, Tracker and WildPath 3
iHeart Posted February 20, 2022 Report Posted February 20, 2022 well Spring is going to be interesting Mark F 1
Mark H. Posted February 20, 2022 Report Posted February 20, 2022 ^^ only if we get a very fast melt. The water table is pretty much gone and most creeks were 90% dried by the end of summer. There is definitely room for water. blue_gold_84 1
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