I expect there to be militant lobbying efforts against fusion once it starts posing an immediate threat to oil and gas. — Mr Bee
But I don't have faith that humans will achieve what they hope for. — Agree-to-Disagree
Who gives a damn about how you feel about this. — Mikie
You, on the other hand, have contributed nothing except “I don’t feel it’ll happen.” — Mikie
And it could be far less if people would be prepared to consume less. — Benkei
Imagine if every asshole didn't need a new iphone every 2 seconds because they added a new pubic hair behind the camera. Apple is one of the most profitable industries ever because of the mythical upgrade - just another tragedy of brainless compulsory consumption. — Merkwurdichliebe
Individuals need to look at their own carbon footprint — Agree-to-Disagree
Straight from Big Oil’s boardrooms to your brain. What a shocker. — Mikie
If whining and complaining and blaming others could solve CC/GW then there wouldn't be a problem. — Agree-to-Disagree
This will not be solved individually. We need collective action and governmental action. — Mikie
Collective action = lots of people reducing their carbon footprint. — Agree-to-Disagree
The very short counterargument is that individual acts of thrift and abstinence won’t get us the huge distance we need to go in this decade. We need to exit the age of fossil fuels, reinvent our energy landscape, rethink how we do almost everything. We need collective action at every scale from local to global – and the good people already at work on all those levels need help in getting a city to commit to clean power or a state to stop fracking or a nation to end fossil-fuel subsidies. The revolution won’t happen by people staying home and being good.
But the oil companies would like you to think that’s how it works. It turns out that the concept of the “carbon footprint”, that popular measure of personal impact, was the brainchild of an advertising firm working for BP. As Mark Kaufman wrote this summer:
British Petroleum, the second largest non-state owned oil company in the world, with 18,700 gas and service stations worldwide, hired the public relations professionals Ogilvy & Mather to promote the slant that climate change is not the fault of an oil giant, but that of individuals. It’s here that British Petroleum, or BP, first promoted and soon successfully popularized the term “carbon footprint” in the early aughts. The company unveiled its “carbon footprint calculator” in 2004 so one could assess how their normal daily life – going to work, buying food, and (gasp) traveling – is largely responsible for heating the globe.
The main reason to defeat the fossil fuel corporations is that their product is destroying the planet, but their insidious propaganda, from spreading climate-change denial to pushing this climate footprint business, makes this goal even more worthwhile.
Antarctic sea ice extent remained at a record low level for the time of year.
Both the daily and monthly extents reached their lowest annual maxima in the satellite record in September, with the monthly extent 9% below average.
Climate change: Study warns deadly humid heat could hit billions as wet-bulb temperatures soar
Billions of people could struggle to survive in periods of deadly, humid heat within this century as temperatures rise, particularly in some of the world's largest cities, from Delhi to Shanghai, according to research published on Monday.
The study built on past research by Huber, George Mason University climatologist Daniel Vecellio and other scientists on the point at which heat and humidity combine to push the human body beyond its limits without shade or help from technologies such as air conditioning.
It found that around 750 million people could experience one week per year of potentially deadly humid heat if temperatures rise 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels.
At 3C (5.4F) of warming, more than 1.5 billion people would face such a threat, according to the paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The world is on track for 2.8C (5F) of warming by the year 2100 under current policies, according to the 2022 United Nations Emissions Gap report. — Reuters
I think Rosatom holds something in the range of 90% of the total market share, including all the related services (maintenance, waste disposal, etc.). — Tzeentch
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