Climate Change News & Discussions

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caltrek
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Our Fixation on Forests as a Climate Solution Is Causing Problems
by Kate Yoder
May 20, 2024

Introduction:
(Mother Jones) What is the value of a tree? It can provide a cool place to rest in the shade, a snack in the form of fruit, lumber to build a home, and cleaner air. But trees are increasingly being prized for one thing: their ability to capture carbon and counteract climate change.

Billions of dollars are flowing into projects to plant and protect trees so that governments and businesses can claim they’ve canceled out their emissions. Saving forests and planting trees are often portrayed as a “triple win” for the environment, economy, and people. According to a major report being presented on Friday at the United Nations Forum on Forests, however, that goal is proving more complicated than expected.

The conversation about how to manage forests “has been overtaken by the climate discussion,” said Daniela Kleinschmit, an author of the report and the vice president of the International Union of Forest Research Organizations, the network behind the research. The result? Indigenous peoples are getting pushed out of their lands because of carbon offset projects. Native grasslands are getting turned into forests, even though grasslands themselves are huge, overlooked reservoirs of carbon. And offset projects in forests, more often than not, fail to achieve all of the emissions benefits their backers had promised.

The new report, the first comprehensive assessment of how the world is governing its forests in 14 years, offers some good news—global deforestation rates have slowed down slightly, from 32 million acres a year in 2010 to 25 million in 2020. But what the report calls the “climatization” of forests has led to the rise of carbon sequestration markets that prioritize short-term profits over long-term sustainability, it found.

Experts say that it’s possible to pursue the global goal of sequestering carbon in forests while also keeping locals happy—it would just take a more thoughtful approach that considers the tradeoffs and involves the people most affected.
Read more here: https://www.motherjones.com/environmen ... s-people/
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Guardian Environment
@guardianeco
More than third of Amazon rainforest struggling to recover from drought, study finds

https://x.com/guardianeco/status/1792632660591853958
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Global sea level rise is accelerating.
https://x.com/LeonSimons8/status/1793757973703196684
Ice melt is also increasing, but @NOAA
data suggests that (net) more than 100% of the rise is due to thermal expansion of the oceans!
https://x.com/LeonSimons8/status/179375 ... 84/photo/1
This is very bad news, because that takes about 50 times as much heat!

More soon.
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For those who think "animals will just adapt" to climate change.

-----

It’s so hot in Mexico that howler monkeys are falling dead from the trees

Updated 6:30 AM BST, May 22, 2024

MEXICO CITY (AP) — It’s so hot in Mexico that howler monkeys are falling dead from the trees.

At least 138 of the midsize primates, who are known for their roaring vocal calls, were found dead in the Gulf Coast state of Tabasco since May 16, according to the Biodiversity Conservation of The Usumacinta group. Others were rescued by residents, including five that were rushed to a local veterinarian who battled to save them.

“They arrived in critical condition, with dehydration and fever,” said Dr. Sergio Valenzuela. “They were as limp as rags. It was heatstroke.”

[...]

“They were falling out of the trees like apples,” Pozo said. “They were in a state of severe dehydration, and they died within a matter of minutes.” Already weakened, Pozo says, the falls from dozens of yards (meters) up inflict additional damage that often finishes the monkeys off.

[...]

“This is a sentinel species,” Pozo said, referring to the canary-in-a-coal-mine effect where one species can say a lot about an ecosystem. “It is telling us something about what is happening with climate change.”

https://apnews.com/article/mexico-heat- ... 63acecde78


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A soldier removes the body of a howler monkey that died amid extremely high temperatures in Tecolutilla, Tabasco state, Mexico, May 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Luis Sanchez)
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New study shows heat waves increase risk of preterm, early-term birth

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-05- ... birth.html
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The following is a government news release. Restrictions on size due to copyright considerations therefore do not apply.

Biden-⁠Harris Administration Announces New Principles for High-Integrity Voluntary Carbon Markets
May 28, 2024

Introduction:
(The White House) Since Day One, President Biden has led and delivered on the most ambitious climate agenda in history, including by securing the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest-ever climate investment, and taking executive action to cut greenhouse gas emissions across every sector of the economy. The President’s Investing in America agenda has already catalyzed more than $860 billion in business investments through smart, public incentives in industries of the future like electric vehicles (EVs), clean energy, and semiconductors. With support from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, CHIPS and Science Act, and Inflation Reduction Act, these investments are creating new American jobs in manufacturing and clean energy and helping communities that have been left behind make a comeback.

The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to taking ambitious action to drive the investments needed to achieve our nation’s historic climate goals – cutting greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and reaching net zero by 2050. President Biden firmly believes that these investments must create economic opportunities across America’s diverse businesses – ranging from farms in rural communities, to innovative technology companies, to historically- underserved entrepreneurs.

As part of this commitment, the Biden-Harris Administration is today releasing a JointStatement of Policy and new Principles for Responsible Participation in Voluntary CarbonMarkets (VCMs)that codify the U.S. government’s approach to advance high-integrity VCMs. The principles and statement, co-signed by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Senior Advisor for International Climate Policy John Podesta, National Economic Advisor Lael Brainard, and National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi, represent the U.S. government’s commitment to advancing the responsible development of VCMs, with clear incentives and guardrails in place to ensure that this market drives ambitious and credible climate action and generates economic opportunity.

The President’s Investing in America agenda has crowded in a historic surge of private capital to take advantage of the generational investments in the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. High-integrity VCMs have the power to further crowd in private capital and reliably fund diverse organizations at home and abroad –whether climate technology companies, small businesses, farmers, or entrepreneurs –that are developing and deploying projects to reduce carbon emissions and remove carbon from the atmosphere.

However, further steps are needed to strengthen this market and enable VCMs to deliver on their potential. Observers have found evidence that several popular crediting methodologies do not reliably produce the decarbonization outcomes they claim. In too many instances, credits do not live up to the high standards necessary for market participants to transact transparently and with certainty that credit purchases will deliver verifiable decarbonization. As a result, additional action is needed to rectify challenges that have emerged, restore confidence to the market, and ensure that VCMs live up to their potential to drive climate ambition and deliver on their decarbonization promise. This includes: establishing robust standards for carbon credit supply and demand; improving market functioning; ensuring fair and equitable treatment of all participants and advancing environmental justice, including fair distribution of revenue; and instilling market confidence.
Read more of the White House press release here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-ro ... -markets/

To access the JointStatement of Policy and new Principles for Responsible Participation in Voluntary CarbonMarkets (VCMs):
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/u ... rinciples.
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Climate Change Is Making Airplane Turbulence More Common and Severe, Scientists Say

May 31, 2024

Passengers aboard a Singapore Airlines flight last week hit severe turbulence over the Indian Ocean—and in the span of just one second, the plane dropped by 178 feet. One passenger, a 73-year-old man, died, and dozens of other people were injured. The plane, which was traveling from London to Singapore, made an emergency landing in Bangkok, and news of the incident has placed airplane turbulence—and the science behind it—back into national and international conversations.

And for good reason: Research suggests air turbulence has already become more common, and it is projected to grow even more frequent and severe because of climate change. Most of these in-flight disturbances are harmless, so long as safety procedures are adhered to. But more intense instances of turbulence could create more stressful or dangerous flight experiences for passengers and flight attendants alike.

“It is not that we’ll have to stop flying, or planes will start falling out of the sky,” Paul Williams, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Reading who has researched air turbulence, tells Nature News’ Carissa Wong. “I’m just saying that for every ten minutes you’ve spent in severe turbulence in the past, it could be 20 or 30 minutes in the future.”

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-ne ... 180984440/
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Ban fossil fuel ads to save climate, says UN chief
20 minutes ago

Image

Fossil fuel advertisements should be banned around the world to help fight climate change, a United Nations’ chief warned.

UN secretary-general António Guterres slammed coal, oil and gas corporations as the “godfathers of climate chaos” and called for a clampdown on their advertising.

It comes as the EU’s climate change monitoring service said each of the past 12 months ranked as the warmest on record in year-on-year comparisons with the average temperature 1.63C above pre-industrial averages.

“The godfathers of climate chaos, the fossil fuel industry, rake in record profits and feast off trillions in taxpayer-funded subsidies,” Mr Guterres said.

“I urge every country to ban advertising from fossil fuel companies, and I urge news media and tech companies to stop taking fossil fuel advertising.”
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/scie ... 57271.html
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Sure, Biden’s Climate Policy Could Be Better, but Consider What a Second Trump Term Would Be Like
by Jonathan Thompson
May 31, 2024

Introduction:
(High Country News) This April, at a steak dinner with oil and gas executives at the Mar-a-Lago Club, in Florida, former President Donald Trump made a request backed by a hefty promise: If the CEOs in attendance raised $1 billion to support his reelection bid, he would lower their taxes and eviscerate environmental and public health protections once he became president, clearing away the “regulatory burdens” that stand in the way of their companies injecting more carbon into the atmosphere — and profiting handsomely from it.

According to reporting by the Washington Post, Trump promised to reverse dozens of Biden administration policies, including a moratorium on approvals for liquefied natural gas exports, new restrictions on Arctic drilling and many regulations of oil and gas drilling on public land. For good measure, he’d also scrap electric vehicle mandates and bring an immediate end to all offshore wind development.

Judging from Trump’s record, he fully intends to fulfill these promises, and then some. And his mission will be backed by a playbook — alarming for its extreme approach — fashioned by a right-wing coalition intent on dismantling the administrative state.

It’s astounding that the presumptive Republican presidential nominee can solicit a billion-dollar bribe to sell out America’s public lands and not be immediately disqualified or even prosecuted. After all, one-time Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall was disgraced and tossed into jail for doing the same thing, in an incident known as the Teapot Dome scandal in the 1920s. Even more dumbfounding is that, according to some polls, President Biden and Trump are statistically tied among young voters on the issue of climate change.
Further extract:
To see no difference between Biden and Trump is simply ignorant.
Read more here: https://www.hcn.org/articles/trump-vs- ... climate/

If you are having trouble with the High Country link, the article was also reprinted in Mother Jones: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2 ... -be-like/
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Flooding Set to Cost U.S. Hundreds of Billions as Risks Mount
by Andrew Freedman
June 10, 2024

Introduction:
(Axios) Flooding — which has gotten increasingly severe in an era of extreme weather — costs the U.S. economy an estimated $179.8 to $496 billion per year in 2023 dollars, according to new data from Democrats on the Senate Joint Economic Committee.

Why it matters: The estimates are the equivalent of over 1% of 2023's gross domestic product, the report notes. It sheds light on a worsening problem for the insurance industry, as well as businesses and homeowners across the country.

The big picture: The report focuses on an issue that lawmakers in both parties are confronting, as a warming climate increases flood risks and severity.

• Governors in states such as Florida and Louisiana are grappling with insurers fleeing their states amid rising hurricane-related hazards like inland, coastal and storm surge flooding.

• The report finds that human-caused climate change is boosting flood risks, given that heavy precipitation is becoming more frequent and intense, and coastal sea levels are rising.

• The committee's majority staffers undertook their own research and consulted outside experts to come up with the new estimates, a committee spokesperson told Axios.
Read more here: https://www.axios.com/2024/06/10/clima ... -flooding
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