k***@gmail.com
2024-08-29 16:32:58 UTC
[RECORD!]
You just lived through the most humid summer on record
WaPo, 29 Aug 2024 15:29Z
Fueled by human-caused climate change, the record humidity has made heat
waves more dangerous and intensified downpours.
--
US leads wealthy countries spending bns of public money on unproven
`climate solutions'
The Guardian, 29 Aug 2024 14:26Z
Over $12bn in subsidies awarded for technologies like carbon capture experts
call 'colossal waste of money'
Arctic heat waves linked to sea ice loss, new study reveals
Phys.org, 29 Aug 2024 15:29Z
Amid global warming, heat waves are striking even the Arctic, a region once
considered immune to such extreme weather events.
[Over 50C is just a number!]
Record 50C temperature increase over Antarctica to shift Australia's weather
patterns
ABC News, 27 Jul 2024
The temperature above the east Antarctic coastline warmed by about 50
degrees Celsius in a week earlier in July. The event, ...
Dozens injured, power cut as Typhoon Shanshan hits southern Japan
Al Jazeera English, 29 Aug 2024 04:28Z
Canada wildfires last year released more carbon than several countries
The Weather Network, 28 Aug 2024 13:30Z
But climate change, driven by the burning of fossil fuels, is leading to
drier and hotter conditions, driving extreme ...
Earlier this year, the Australian Government confirmed its
intention to make climate-related disclosures mandatory
for large businesses and financial institutions. In June
2023, the Commonwealth Treasury released the proposed
design for a mandatory reporting framework, with the
Australian approach to be based on standards recently
issued by the International Sustainability Standards
Board. Although the final details of the policy are yet to
be settled, the strategic direction is clear.
This shift to mandatory climate-related disclosure
presents the biggest change to corporate reporting in a
generation. Navigating these issues will require concerted
focus and investment by companies. Getting started
early is critical, as is a recognition that the quality and
depth of reporting will mature over time.
As stewards of long-term value, boards have a critical
role to play in overseeing this shift to high-quality climate
reporting, and building organisational resilience in the
face of the escalating physical and transitional risks
posed by climate change.
-- Joe Longo, Chair ASIC, 2023
In 2023, Earth experienced its hottest year on record, and massive floods,
wildfires, and other climate-related disasters affected mns of people
around the world. Meanwhile, rapid and worrisome developments in the life
sciences and other disruptive technologies accelerated, while govts
made only feeble efforts to control them. [...]
Today, we once again set the Doomsday Clock at 90 seconds to midnight
because humanity continues to face an unprecedented level of danger.
Our decision should not be taken as a sign that the international
security situation has eased. Instead, leaders and citizens around the
world should take this statement as a stark warning and respond
urgently, as if today were the most dangerous moment in modern history.
Because it may well be.
-- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 23 Jan 2024
[At 1 min to midnight pushing the apple cart over seems rational].
Finally, we suggest that 2024 is likely to be off the chart as the
warmest year on record. Without inside information, that would be a
dangerous prediction, but we proffer it because it is unlikely that
the current La Nina will continue a fourth year. Even a little futz of
an El Nino - like the tropical warming in 2018-19, which barely
qualified as an El Nino - should be sufficient for record global
temperature. A classical, strong El Nino in 2023-24 could push global
temperature to about +1.5°C relative to the 1880-1920 mean, which is
our estimate of preindustrial temperature.
-- J Hansen et al, newsletter 23 Sep 2022
Solar panels and crops could meet 68% of central Europe's energy demand
Euronews, 29 Aug 2024 14:30Z
Combining farming with green energy production could also increase food
security and generate additional income for farmers, according to a new study.
More Than 1,000 Viruses Unknown to Science Found in Melting Ice
Newsweek, 29 Aug 2024 16:11Z
"This at least indicates the potential connection between viruses and
climate change," researcher ZhiPing Zhong said.
South Korea Needs More Long-Term Climate Targets, Court Rules
Bloomberg L.P., 29 Aug 2024 09:27Z
South Korea's absence of incremental climate goals for the years between
2030 and 2050 doesn't conform with the country's ...
Court rules S. Korea climate goals 'unconstitutional'
Hosted on MSN, 29 Aug 2024 09:28Z
South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled Thu that much of the country's
climate goals were unconstitutional, handing a ...
Australians are living longer than most people in English-speaking OECD
countries, new research says
ABC News, 29 Aug 2024 06:45Z
People living in Australia have better health outcomes and face
less inequality compared to other high-income countries in the
Anglosphere.
Groundbreaking Discovery: NASA Reveals Earth's Elusive Global Electric Field
and Its Impact on Our Atmosphere
The Daily Galaxy, 28 Aug 2024 16:31Z
Lonely? Playful? Why are dolphin attacks rising in Japan?
Nature.com, 28 Aug 2024
You just lived through the most humid summer on record
WaPo, 29 Aug 2024 15:29Z
Fueled by human-caused climate change, the record humidity has made heat
waves more dangerous and intensified downpours.
--
US leads wealthy countries spending bns of public money on unproven
`climate solutions'
The Guardian, 29 Aug 2024 14:26Z
Over $12bn in subsidies awarded for technologies like carbon capture experts
call 'colossal waste of money'
Arctic heat waves linked to sea ice loss, new study reveals
Phys.org, 29 Aug 2024 15:29Z
Amid global warming, heat waves are striking even the Arctic, a region once
considered immune to such extreme weather events.
[Over 50C is just a number!]
Record 50C temperature increase over Antarctica to shift Australia's weather
patterns
ABC News, 27 Jul 2024
The temperature above the east Antarctic coastline warmed by about 50
degrees Celsius in a week earlier in July. The event, ...
Dozens injured, power cut as Typhoon Shanshan hits southern Japan
Al Jazeera English, 29 Aug 2024 04:28Z
Canada wildfires last year released more carbon than several countries
The Weather Network, 28 Aug 2024 13:30Z
But climate change, driven by the burning of fossil fuels, is leading to
drier and hotter conditions, driving extreme ...
Earlier this year, the Australian Government confirmed its
intention to make climate-related disclosures mandatory
for large businesses and financial institutions. In June
2023, the Commonwealth Treasury released the proposed
design for a mandatory reporting framework, with the
Australian approach to be based on standards recently
issued by the International Sustainability Standards
Board. Although the final details of the policy are yet to
be settled, the strategic direction is clear.
This shift to mandatory climate-related disclosure
presents the biggest change to corporate reporting in a
generation. Navigating these issues will require concerted
focus and investment by companies. Getting started
early is critical, as is a recognition that the quality and
depth of reporting will mature over time.
As stewards of long-term value, boards have a critical
role to play in overseeing this shift to high-quality climate
reporting, and building organisational resilience in the
face of the escalating physical and transitional risks
posed by climate change.
-- Joe Longo, Chair ASIC, 2023
In 2023, Earth experienced its hottest year on record, and massive floods,
wildfires, and other climate-related disasters affected mns of people
around the world. Meanwhile, rapid and worrisome developments in the life
sciences and other disruptive technologies accelerated, while govts
made only feeble efforts to control them. [...]
Today, we once again set the Doomsday Clock at 90 seconds to midnight
because humanity continues to face an unprecedented level of danger.
Our decision should not be taken as a sign that the international
security situation has eased. Instead, leaders and citizens around the
world should take this statement as a stark warning and respond
urgently, as if today were the most dangerous moment in modern history.
Because it may well be.
-- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 23 Jan 2024
[At 1 min to midnight pushing the apple cart over seems rational].
Finally, we suggest that 2024 is likely to be off the chart as the
warmest year on record. Without inside information, that would be a
dangerous prediction, but we proffer it because it is unlikely that
the current La Nina will continue a fourth year. Even a little futz of
an El Nino - like the tropical warming in 2018-19, which barely
qualified as an El Nino - should be sufficient for record global
temperature. A classical, strong El Nino in 2023-24 could push global
temperature to about +1.5°C relative to the 1880-1920 mean, which is
our estimate of preindustrial temperature.
-- J Hansen et al, newsletter 23 Sep 2022
Solar panels and crops could meet 68% of central Europe's energy demand
Euronews, 29 Aug 2024 14:30Z
Combining farming with green energy production could also increase food
security and generate additional income for farmers, according to a new study.
More Than 1,000 Viruses Unknown to Science Found in Melting Ice
Newsweek, 29 Aug 2024 16:11Z
"This at least indicates the potential connection between viruses and
climate change," researcher ZhiPing Zhong said.
South Korea Needs More Long-Term Climate Targets, Court Rules
Bloomberg L.P., 29 Aug 2024 09:27Z
South Korea's absence of incremental climate goals for the years between
2030 and 2050 doesn't conform with the country's ...
Court rules S. Korea climate goals 'unconstitutional'
Hosted on MSN, 29 Aug 2024 09:28Z
South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled Thu that much of the country's
climate goals were unconstitutional, handing a ...
Australians are living longer than most people in English-speaking OECD
countries, new research says
ABC News, 29 Aug 2024 06:45Z
People living in Australia have better health outcomes and face
less inequality compared to other high-income countries in the
Anglosphere.
Groundbreaking Discovery: NASA Reveals Earth's Elusive Global Electric Field
and Its Impact on Our Atmosphere
The Daily Galaxy, 28 Aug 2024 16:31Z
Lonely? Playful? Why are dolphin attacks rising in Japan?
Nature.com, 28 Aug 2024