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Climate Change - R_P - Aug 30, 2024 - 12:50pm
 
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Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » Climate Change Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 129, 130, 131  Next
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R_P

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Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 30, 2024 - 12:50pm


haresfur

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Location: The Golden Triangle
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 29, 2024 - 9:33pm

Antarctic heat, wild Australian winter: what’s happening to the weather and what it means for the rest of the year


TL;DR: Shit's fucked

R_P

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Posted: Aug 29, 2024 - 8:30pm


Isabeau

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Location: sou' tex
Gender: Female


Posted: Aug 23, 2024 - 10:23am

Meanwhile, in Texas, Guadalupe River tubing has been found to be a dangerous activity....

R_P

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Posted: Aug 19, 2024 - 7:49pm

When will climate change turn life in the U.S. upside down?
Intensifying extreme weather events and an insurance crisis are likely to cause significant economic and political disruption in the U.S. sometime in the next 15 years.
The words of explorer John Wesley Powell on the eve of his departure into the unexplored depths of the Grand Canyon in 1869 best describe how I see our path ahead as we brave the unknown rapids of climate change:
We are now ready to start our way down the Great Unknown. We have an unknown distance yet to run, an unknown river to explore. What falls there are, we know not; what rocks beset the channel, we know not; what walls rise over the river, we know not. Ah, well! We may conjecture many things. The men talk as cheerfully as ever; jests are bandied about freely this morning; but to me the cheer is somber and the jests are ghastly.
Powell’s expedition made it through the canyon, but the explorers endured great hardship, suffering near-drownings, the destruction of two of their four boats, and the loss of much of their supplies. In the end, only six of the nine men survived.

Likewise, we find ourselves in an ever-deepening chasm of climate change impacts, forced to run a perilous course through dangerous rapids of unknown ferocity. Our path will be fraught with great peril, and there will be tremendous suffering, great loss of life, and the destruction of much that is precious.

It is inevitable that climate change will stop being a hazy future concern and will someday turn everyday life upside down. Very hard times are coming. At the risk of causing counterproductive climate anxiety and doomism, I offer here some observations and speculations on how the planetary crisis may play out, using my 45 years of experience as a meteorologist, including four years of flying with the Hurricane Hunters and 20 years blogging about extreme weather and climate change. The scenarios that I depict as the most likely are much harsher than what other experts might choose, but I’ve seen repeatedly that uncertainty is not our friend when it comes to climate change. This will be a long and intense ride, but if you stick through the end, I promise there will be a rainbow.

By late this century, I am optimistic that we will have successfully ridden the rapids of the climate crisis, emerging into a new era of non-polluting energy with a stabilizing climate. There are too many talented and dedicated people who understand the problem and are working hard on solutions for us to fail. (...)

R_P

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Posted: Jul 31, 2024 - 8:04am

Plants and their pollinators are increasingly out of sync
As global temperatures rise and seasons shift, bees and other pollinators are missing critical connections with flowers and crops.
R_P

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Posted: Jul 29, 2024 - 2:08pm


R_P

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Posted: Jul 28, 2024 - 4:07pm


R_P

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Posted: Jul 24, 2024 - 8:54am


Isabeau

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Location: sou' tex
Gender: Female


Posted: Jul 20, 2024 - 6:39am

 ColdMiser wrote:

Or before the Fossil Fuel Industry gave him $238,000 for his campaign. Drain the Swamp? Hardly. 


Interesting that his childhood was supported mostly by his grandfather who worked at a blue collar job and was a member of a union.
R_P

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Posted: Jul 19, 2024 - 8:50pm

US oil company ran 1977 article predicting climate crisis could cause starvation
Marathon Petroleum predecessor warned of potential for ‘social and economic calamities’ in decades-old publication
The corporate predecessor to America’s largest refiner of oil, Marathon Petroleum, explained in a company periodical nearly 50 years ago that global temperature rise potentially linked to “industrial expansion” could one day cause “widespread starvation and other social and economic calamities”.

This decades-old description of climate breakdown is from a 1977 issue of the magazine Marathon World and is attributed in the article by an unnamed author to several experts including a scientist working for a top US agency.

“Although climatologists disagree on the underlying reasons, many see a future climate of greater variability, bringing with it areas of extreme drought,” said the magazine, previously published by Marathon Oil Company, which later split into Marathon Petroleum as well as the exploration and production company Marathon Oil.

Marathon Petroleum is among several oil and gas companies – including Exxon, Shell and BP – currently being sued by the city of Honolulu for allegedly engaging in a coordinated communications effort “to conceal and deny their own knowledge” of catastrophic climate impacts caused by burning their products.

That lawsuit alleges that Marathon knew of the dangers of global temperature rise long before the general public due to its membership in the American Petroleum Institute, which began studying the link between fossil fuels and global heating decades ago.

This newly surfaced article shows the company was undertaking efforts on its own to stay up to date on the latest climate science and the threats a more volatile climate could pose to humankind. (...)

ColdMiser

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Location: On the Trail
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Posted: Jul 19, 2024 - 6:35am

 R_P wrote:
Or before the Fossil Fuel Industry gave him $238,000 for his campaign. Drain the Swamp? Hardly. 
R_P

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Posted: Jul 18, 2024 - 7:14pm

Before the beard and lobotomy
JD Vance: "We have a climate problem in our society"

R_P

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Posted: Jul 17, 2024 - 8:34pm


R_P

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Posted: Jul 13, 2024 - 10:28am

In the South, Sea Level Rise Accelerates at Some of the Most Extreme Rates on Earth
The surge is startling scientists, amplifying impacts such as hurricane storm surges and nuisance flooding and testing mitigation measures like the Resilient Florida program
ColdMiser

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Location: On the Trail
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Posted: Jul 12, 2024 - 7:55am

 R_P wrote:
‘More Heat, More Often’: Temperature Records Keep Breaking
The burning of fossil fuels has created more frequent and more intense heat waves. Experts warn these heat waves are “the new normal.”
June was the Earth’s 13th consecutive month to break a global heat record. It beat the record set last year for the hottest June on record, according to data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service of the European Union.“

We should consider this the new normal,” said Katherine Idziorek, an assistant professor in geography and community planning at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. “We need to be preparing for more heat, more often. That’s the reality.”

More than half the U.S. population — almost 175 million people — faced extreme heat on July 4, and the impacts of this new normal continued to broil the country this week. (...)

“Heat is like the silent storm,” said David Sittenfeld, the director of the Center for the Environment at Boston’s Museum of Science. Other climate-related hazards like heavy rain and wildfires are more visible, he said, but heat affects everyone and can exacerbate socio-economic inequalities.

The burden of urban heat, for example, isn’t equally distributed. A Columbia University analysis showed that neighborhoods that were historically redlined experienced hotter summers in 84 percent of major American cities, including Houston.

These communities often experience the urban heat island effect: Roads and rooftops absorb more heat than natural spaces do, making urban areas hotter than rural areas. A report by the nonprofit research group Climate Central found that almost 70 percent of 50 million city dwellers are in areas where the temperature was at least 8 degrees Fahrenheit higher because of city infrastructure.

Based on that analysis, over 1.7 million people in Houston were experiencing heat at least 8 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the 90-degree temperatures that led to a heat advisory on Thursday — while more than a million people were still without power.


You see all this on Main Stream Media and I think most folks just don't get it, or don't care, or are resigned to it being normal. Wouldn't it be nice if when you went to the supermarket to buy groceries there were signs or videos showing what this heat does to our food infrastructure. When it's triple digits for weeks on end, how do you think the vegetables are doing? The cattle, the chickens. When it floods does everything bounce right back like it never happened? Instead most people think the high cost of groceries are the governments (usually the presidents) fault.  There needs to be some other form of communication to regular folks that this is effecting their lives in ways they don't obviously see but are real. 

R_P

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Posted: Jul 11, 2024 - 3:48pm

‘More Heat, More Often’: Temperature Records Keep Breaking
The burning of fossil fuels has created more frequent and more intense heat waves. Experts warn these heat waves are “the new normal.”
June was the Earth’s 13th consecutive month to break a global heat record. It beat the record set last year for the hottest June on record, according to data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service of the European Union.“

We should consider this the new normal,” said Katherine Idziorek, an assistant professor in geography and community planning at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. “We need to be preparing for more heat, more often. That’s the reality.”

More than half the U.S. population — almost 175 million people — faced extreme heat on July 4, and the impacts of this new normal continued to broil the country this week. (...)

“Heat is like the silent storm,” said David Sittenfeld, the director of the Center for the Environment at Boston’s Museum of Science. Other climate-related hazards like heavy rain and wildfires are more visible, he said, but heat affects everyone and can exacerbate socio-economic inequalities.

The burden of urban heat, for example, isn’t equally distributed. A Columbia University analysis showed that neighborhoods that were historically redlined experienced hotter summers in 84 percent of major American cities, including Houston.

These communities often experience the urban heat island effect: Roads and rooftops absorb more heat than natural spaces do, making urban areas hotter than rural areas. A report by the nonprofit research group Climate Central found that almost 70 percent of 50 million city dwellers are in areas where the temperature was at least 8 degrees Fahrenheit higher because of city infrastructure.

Based on that analysis, over 1.7 million people in Houston were experiencing heat at least 8 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the 90-degree temperatures that led to a heat advisory on Thursday — while more than a million people were still without power.

R_P

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Posted: Jul 10, 2024 - 11:00am

Hot Nights Fuel Wildfires, Complicating Containment Efforts
Climate change is causing more fires to burn overnight, growing bigger, lasting longer and challenging the fire teams trying to control them.
Over the July 4 weekend, hundreds of fires sparked across California, feeding on the hot, dry conditions of an ongoing heat wave.

But some of these fires were strange.

They grew rapidly and expanded their territory at a time when fires, like people, traditionally rest: at night.

Overnight hours, when temperatures tend to go down and relative humidity, or the amount of water vapor in the air, goes up, can act as a barrier to fire. Overnight, fires tend to creep along, giving firefighters a chance to sleep or manage smaller flames. But human-caused climate change has accelerated nighttime warming more quickly than daytime warming, dismantling this natural shield.

“Night won’t save us,” said Kaiwei Luo, a doctoral student in environmental sciences at the University of Alberta and the lead author of a recent study in the journal Nature that found overnight burning can cause fires to burn larger and longer. “With climate change, we will see more and more overnight burning,” he said. (...)

thisbody

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Location: terrestrial (only lately)
Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 9, 2024 - 3:45pm

 R_P wrote:
Frustrations mount in the Houston heat after Beryl moves on and leaves millions without power
Beryl, which made landfall early Monday as a Category 1 hurricane, has been blamed for at least seven U.S. deaths — one in Louisiana and six in Texas — and at least 11 in the Caribbean. At midday Tuesday, it was a post-tropical cyclone centered over Arkansas and was forecast to bring heavy rains and possible flooding to a swath extending to the Great Lakes and Canada.

More than 2 million homes and businesses around Houston lacked electricity Tuesday, down from a peak of over 2.7 million on Monday, according to PowerOutage.us. For many, it was a miserable repeat after storms in May killed eight people and left nearly 1 million without power amid flooded streets.

Food spoiled in listless refrigerators in neighborhoods that pined for air conditioning. Long lines of cars and people queued up at any fast food restaurant, food truck or gas station that had power and was open. (...)

Robin Taylor, who got takeout from Denny’s, was getting tired of the same old struggle. She has been living a hotel since her home was damaged by the storms in May. When Beryl hit, her hotel room flooded.

She was angry that Houston didn’t appear prepared to handle the Category 1 storm after it had weathered much stronger ones in the past.

“No WiFi, no power, and it’s hot outside. That’s dangerous for people. That’s really the big issue,” Taylor said. “People will die in this heat in their homes.” (...)


Hey, climate change's only a hoax invented by commies!

R_P

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Posted: Jul 9, 2024 - 3:14pm

Frustrations mount in the Houston heat after Beryl moves on and leaves millions without power
Beryl, which made landfall early Monday as a Category 1 hurricane, has been blamed for at least seven U.S. deaths — one in Louisiana and six in Texas — and at least 11 in the Caribbean. At midday Tuesday, it was a post-tropical cyclone centered over Arkansas and was forecast to bring heavy rains and possible flooding to a swath extending to the Great Lakes and Canada.

More than 2 million homes and businesses around Houston lacked electricity Tuesday, down from a peak of over 2.7 million on Monday, according to PowerOutage.us. For many, it was a miserable repeat after storms in May killed eight people and left nearly 1 million without power amid flooded streets.

Food spoiled in listless refrigerators in neighborhoods that pined for air conditioning. Long lines of cars and people queued up at any fast food restaurant, food truck or gas station that had power and was open. (...)

Robin Taylor, who got takeout from Denny’s, was getting tired of the same old struggle. She has been living a hotel since her home was damaged by the storms in May. When Beryl hit, her hotel room flooded.

She was angry that Houston didn’t appear prepared to handle the Category 1 storm after it had weathered much stronger ones in the past.

“No WiFi, no power, and it’s hot outside. That’s dangerous for people. That’s really the big issue,” Taylor said. “People will die in this heat in their homes.” (...)

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