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Autor Tópico: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris  (Lida 24949 vezes)

vbm

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #260 em: 2020-12-10 10:20:49 »
À base de covides?

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #261 em: 2024-03-23 00:28:48 »
Um debate interessante acerca do clima e alterações climáticas:

Será que a Primavera já não é o que era? || Contra-Corrente em direto na Rádio Observador

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCzrfAC2A7Y
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #262 em: 2024-03-23 02:24:19 »
Uma notícia curiosa:


«Anthropocene unit of geological time is rejected

1 day ago

By Jonathan Amos,Science correspondent, @BBCAmos

Thinkstock ShanghaiThinkstock


Like many materials, concrete saw a dramatic rise in production and use after World War Two


A proposal to codify a new geological epoch based on humanity's influence on Earth has been rejected.

It means "the Anthropocene" will not be added to the chronostratigraphic chart featured in textbooks and on classroom posters to record the major changes in Earth history.

The International Union of Geological Sciences upheld an earlier vote by a lower committee to dismiss the idea.

But it also recognised the term Anthropocene had common currency.

"Despite its rejection as a formal unit of the geologic timescale, the Anthropocene will nevertheless continue to be used not only by Earth and environmental scientists but also by social scientists, politicians and economists as well as by the public at large," the IUGS said.

"It will remain an invaluable descriptor of human impact on the Earth system."

    Canadian mud 'symbolic of human changes to Earth'
    'Case is made' for Anthropocene Epoch

USDE Ivy Mike H-bomb testUSDE
The post-War nuclear tests spread plutonium around the globe

The word Anthropocene comes from the Greek for human, "anthropo".

And the Anthropocene Working Group of scientists had spent over a decade studying the concept and definition of a new unit of geological time, using this label.

They had proposed its start date be 1952, the year nuclear-bomb test residues become evident in sediments worldwide.

The 1950s also mark the onset of the "Great Acceleration", when the human population and its consumption patterns suddenly speeded up.
Voted down

It coincides with the spread of ubiquitous "techno materials", such as aluminium, concrete and plastic.

And the group had even identified a location where this transition was exquisitely recorded - in the chemistry and particles that make up the muds of a lake near Toronto, Canada.

But the proposal was voted down earlier this month by the Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy.

And that decision has now been accepted by the IUGS, despite objections.
CONSERVATION HALTON Crawford Lake, CanadaCONSERVATION HALTON
The muds at the bottom of Crawford Lake record the Great Acceleration

While there is broad agreement humanity's impacts on Earth are pervasive and sufficiently distinctive to justify a separate geological classification, there is considerable debate over when our species became a force of global change.

For example, there is a strong body of opinion that any Anthropocene classification should reflect the major impacts humans introduced as they cut down forests and turned land over to agriculture, which would put the start date many thousands of years in the past.

Another attempt to introduce a new unit of geological time could now have to wait a decade.

In the meantime, we remain in the Holocene epoch, which started at the end of the last ice age, some 11,700 years ago.»


https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-68632086
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #263 em: 2024-03-23 02:26:08 »
E acerca das pérolas q nos querem impor para nosso "bem":

Cortex Frontal com Joana Amaral Dias – Episódio 10: O tratado pandémico

Jornal SOL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcNCF3sONow
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #264 em: 2024-03-23 05:04:36 »
About "Climate Change" and "Greenlash"
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #265 em: 2024-04-04 23:31:10 »
More about the marvelous "Climate Change":


«WATCH: Guyana President ANNIHILATES BBC Climate Change™ Hack

TDB's Photo

by TDB

Thursday, Apr 04, 2024 - 19:43


Originally published via Armageddon Prose:


Pompous, posh bespectacled BBC state media hack Stephen Sackur — who wears his glasses down on the end of his nose for some inexcusable reason as any run-of-the-mill Cambridge douche might — clearly went into this little propaganda session fully expecting the Guyanese president to cuck himself at the altar of Climate Change™, only to find himself besieged in return by a torrent of righteous indignation at the unmitigated gall of this person to dictate to Guyana what it is and is not permitted to do with its own natural resources — as if the current year is 1864, and overt colonialism is still raging strong.

          Related: LGBTQ+™ Neo-Colonialism: Your Taxes Fund Ecuador Drag Show, Transgenderism Confuses Africans

What follows is what the psychoanalysts call “schadenfreude” (relevant part commences at 4:09):

Via The Telegraph:

    “The president of an oil-rich South American country has scolded a BBC reporter for ‘lecturing’ his nation over climate change.

    Irfaan Ali of Guyana sat down with host Stephen Sackur of the BBC HardTalk show for an interview that has now gone viral.

    The country has seen a rapid growth in its oil reserves over the past decade. But Mr Sackur was quick to challenge the president on the potential environmental impact of this industry.

    He said: ‘Over the next decade or two, it’s expected that there will be $150 billion worth of oil and gas extracted off your coast.

    ‘It’s an extraordinary figure. But think of it in practical terms. That means – according to many experts – two billion tons of carbon emissions will come from your seabed from those reserves and released into the atmosphere.’

    But the 43-year-old head of state was quick to jump in with a rebuttal.”

At this turning point in the exchange, I could hear the Mortal Kombat “Finish Him” soundbite in my mind (apologies for the millennial reference), and it titillated me something fierce.

FATALITY.

Continuing:

    “’Let me stop you right there,’ he said. ‘Did you know that Guyana has a forest that is the size of England and Scotland combined, a forest that stores 19.5 gigatons of carbon, a forest that we have kept alive?’

    Guyana sits on the northern coast of the South American continent, bordered by Venezuela to the west, Suriname to the east and Brazil to the south. Much of the country’s landmass is covered by the Amazon rainforest.

    When the reporter asked Mr Ali whether the rainforest gave him the ‘right’ to release the carbon, the Guyanese leader retorted: “Does that give you the right to lecture us on climate change?

    ‘I’m going to lecture you on climate change. Because we have kept this forest alive that you enjoy that the world enjoys, that you don’t pay us for, that you don’t value.

    ‘Guess what? We have the lowest deforestation rate in the world. And guess what? Even with the greatest exploration of oil and gas we will still be net zero.’”

I would be remiss not to note that Guyana likely has the lowest deforestation rate in the world not because of a commitment to environmental conservation but rather historical underdevelopment. Nonetheless, the validity of the point remains.

Continuing:

    “Mr Sackur noted his words were ‘powerful’ and tried to jump back in, but the president did not allow the interruption.

    ‘This is the hypocrisy that exists in the world,’ he said. ‘The world in the last 50 years has lost 65 per cent of the biodiversity. We have kept ours.’”

FLAWLESS VICTORY.

Remarkably, this is hardly the first time in recent history that a BBC hack has gotten totally annihilated by the elected leader of a Latin American country.

Consider this recent exchange between another BBC hack and El Salvador president Nayib Bukele over “human rights.”

Via BBC:

    “I asked him if, now that he had turned the security situation around, he would concentrate on the next stage of the security policy - specifically the legal process of the thousands of people with no gang affiliation who, according to human rights organisations, have been unlawfully jailed.

    ‘I find it somewhat amusing when people say 'Oh, in El Salvador, they arrest people and some of the arrested are innocent,' President Bukele said.

    ‘I'm a little baffled because I wonder if in the UK all of the arrests are of guilty people or if sometimes your police arrest innocent ones?,’ he continued.

    He conceded that police in El Salvador had made ‘a couple of mistakes’ but said that some 7,000 of those arrested had already been released.

    There followed a long answer in which Mr Bukele argued that he was applying a unique solution to El Salvador's unique problem of having long been the murder capital of the world.

    Furthermore, he added, El Salvador had tried countless solutions put forward by Washington, the European Union and the Organization of American States but none of them had worked. The answer, he said, was his policy.

    ‘El Salvador was turned from the most dangerous place in the world to the safest in the Western Hemisphere. That's not a small feat. That's not done easily. No-one in the world has done it before so fast and so clean as we've done it here with no civilian casualties.’”»


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2024-04-04/watch-guyana-president-annihilates-bbc-climate-changetm-hack
« Última modificação: 2024-04-04 23:32:16 por Kaspov »
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #266 em: 2024-04-17 03:05:46 »
Interessante, acerca de "Climate Anxiety" e temas afins:


«A Generation Lost To Climate Anxiety

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden

Wednesday, Apr 17, 2024 - 02:40 AM


Authored by David Zaruk via RealClear Politics,

In a far-reaching new essay in The New Atlantis, the environmental researcher Ted Nordhaus makes a damning and authoritative case that while the basic science of CO2 and climate is solid, it has been abused by the activist class in service of a wildly irresponsible and unscientific climate catastrophism.

This reckless alarmism, saturated across the mainstream media and endlessly amplified by it, has had profound societal consequences. It has both distorted public understanding of the massive benefits the carbon economy makes possible and grossly exaggerated the risks of extreme events it allegedly makes more likely.

As a result it has rendered reasonable debate on climate policy impossible, even as it has given cynical politicians an easy scapegoat for every social ill, drawing attention away from regulatory and institutional failures and laying blame instead at the feet of fossil fuel companies and other evil “emitters.”

Perhaps most perniciously, as Nordhaus details, the doomsday prophesying of climate extremists has created hardened skeptics on one side who are increasingly suspicious of all public “expertise”, while at the same time infecting true believers on the other side with a crippling, pathological fatalism that has come to be referred to as “climate anxiety.”

Climate Anxiety

If there’s any flaw in Nordhaus’ damning and comprehensive analysis it’s that he undersells just how much damage the advent of “climate anxiety” has done already—and how much more it’s likely to do in years to come.

Yes, there’s the obvious cases of obnoxious and lawbreaking behavior, from climate iconoclasts defacing priceless works of art, to interrupting Broadway shows and sporting events, to gluing themselves to buses and holding up traffic on major thoroughfares.

But it runs much deeper than that.

Consider recent headlines: From Vox: “What to do when you’re completely overwhelmed by climate anxiety.” From The Guardian: “Climate anxiety adds to teenagers’ fears.” And the New York Times: “How Climate Change is Changing Therapy.” And perhaps most depressing of all, from the BBC: “Climate anxiety: 'I don't want to burden the world with my child.” The trend is so wide now that they have given it a name: birth strike.

And the data backs up the headlines—like the recent Finnish study of 6,000 subjects that showed people with “woke” beliefs have higher rates of depression.

Developed countries are already facing real increases in mental health issues, many of them human-made and bound up in everything from the opioid crisis to the COVID pandemic. The manufacture of climate anxiety as an issue allegedly on par with those others is a dangerous distraction that draws resources away from solving these other mental health challenges. 

Innovative Solutions or More Activism?

Most of the real action on forestalling or mitigating the negative externalities created by the carbon economy is happening within industry itself. But instead of fueling a new generation of innovators and entrepreneurs to help produce these better, cleaner technologies, climate catastrophism has Gen Z curled up in a collective ball, while the likes of NPR tells its privileged listeners to "Let yourself feel the feelings — all of them" about our coming climate doom. 

Influencers like Greta Thunberg are motivating the young to pursue careers in political activism instead of research and innovation. It is easier to make the world angry through protest than to make it better by finding solutions.

Climate fear-mongering has created a dread so powerful it’s putatively putting people off of having children altogether, at a time when advanced countries are already facing precipitously declining fertility rates.

This bleak picture raises the question of exactly what’s in it for the eco-extremist purveyors of gloom. For Nordhaus, it’s akin to a religious mission. “Apocalyptic claims about an unfolding emergency, rather, serve a millenarian agenda”, he writes, “that variously demands that we abolish capitalism, bring about an end to economic growth, power the global economy entirely with wind and solar energy, feed the global population only with small-scale organic agriculture, and cut global emissions in half over the next decade or two.”

He doesn’t need to add that actually enacting that list of prescriptions would be both extremely unwise and largely impossible (and catastrophic).

Political Opportunism

Nordhaus doesn’t go far enough. Because it doesn’t really matter whether drastic policy proposals would actually work if the real goal is just acquiring enough political power to dictate them.

Left-wing political leaders have been using the specter of a “climate emergency” to justify the expansion of their powers for years—limiting consumer choice with product bans, picking winners and losers with boondoggle subsidies, and using lawfare to try and put energy companies out of business by abusing “public nuisance” laws, just to name a few.

Even the political right is getting in on the action. Just recently a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators introduced the PROVE IT Act, a bill that pairs the Democrats’ long love of climate panic with Republicans' newfound love of protectionism and industrial policy.

Anyone who is paying close enough attention knows that these kinds of power plays are cynical, shortsighted, and counterproductive, but what we are collectively starting to realize is how much they’ve been enabled by the literal derangement of generations of well-intentioned folks by climate catastrophism.

The bitter irony is that there is good evidence the climate “experts” know better—like a recent study of 2,066 people that found that higher levels of scientific knowledge about the environment and climate change was associated with less climate anxiety.

When the famous teenage eco-activist Greta Thunberg snarled and sobbed at a UN climate conference that those in power had “stolen her childhood” she was absolutely right – just not in the way she thought...

All is not Lost

As the media reported children weeping in the streets during highly managed Extinction Rebellion or Just Stop Oil campaigns, shouldn’t there be some other direction for us to take? How can we motivate the next generation to be a force for innovation and positive change rather than feed them a steady diet of nihilism, hate, and anxiety? There are certain things that can be done to frame the future of humanity in a more positive light.

Here are some ideas on how to stop malignant activism from eroding the hopes of humanity:

    Young people need positive mentors who are standing up to the pessimism with positive solutions. Scientists, professors, influencers need to focus on developing answers rather than acrimony.

    Positive stories need to be told. While the media focused on Greta as she sucked the hope out of the youth, other young people, like Boyan Slat, whose Ocean Cleanup achievements were legitimately inspirational, were largely ignored. Too bad the media is now funded largely by climate catastrophe foundations that promulgate pessimism. A new approach to media reporting, more transparent, more balanced, is overdue.

    Tech, business, and medical research sectors have venture capitalists who provide competitions and seed capital for young innovators to develop their ideas. Many recipients leave university to develop their ideas into successful companies. Very little like this exists for environmental health researchers. Rather there are a large number of bitter, under-funded postdocs who amplify the negativism.

    Tort reform in the US is necessary. Nordhaus highlighted how law firms were benefiting from the amplified public hatred of fossil fuel companies. Their lucrative anonymous payments to scientists, NGOs, foundations, filmmakers and the media via dark, donor-advised funds is poisoning an already toxic political arena.

    There needs to be better communication on the achievements and success stories of capitalism. The idea that the only solution to these climate challenges is to dismantle industry, restrict global trade, and block free markets is simply ludicrous.

These are a few of the necessary steps to help the public find a balance between humanity and environmental concerns. On climate issues, there needs to be more hope than horror, more imagination than resignation, and more inspiration than anxiety. With better stories and more responsible storytellers, the climate narrative can be reshaped from one of bitter acrimony to a challenge for innovators to once again push humanity forward.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/generation-lost-climate-anxiety
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there

Kaspov

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Re: Climate Change - acordo na conferência de Paris
« Responder #267 em: 2024-04-18 18:32:13 »
Uma conversa com mto int. acercas dos EV's:

Adam Rozencwajg: Will EVs Succeed? Efficiency, Emissions and a Potential Catalyst

Investing News

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VToOlJst-oU
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there