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4 votes
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Carbon-neutral in fifteen years? Finland – the country with an ambitious plan
7 votes -
Greta Thunberg: ‘Forget about net zero, we need real zero’
19 votes -
UK terrorism police list Extinction Rebellion as extremist ideology
12 votes -
The Australian government has been forced to talk about climate change, so it’s taking a subtle – and sinister – approach
11 votes -
Year of the planet, environmental activism, and us
Hi! I'm Micycle_the_Bichael! I'm a pretty passionate local environmental activist. Short summary: I think climate change is bad, but even if climate change wasn't happening the way we interact...
Hi! I'm Micycle_the_Bichael! I'm a pretty passionate local environmental activist. Short summary: I think climate change is bad, but even if climate change wasn't happening the way we interact with nature is still gross and leaves a lot to be desired (ex: over fishing, whaling, landfills). While there definitely needs to be governmental action on corporations on climate change, there are still changes that can be made in your daily life to help make the world a better place! Enter the year of the planet. This is a community group for making one small change a month to help the environment. Some may be things you're already doing, some may be new. For example: the January goal is to start using a reusable coffee cup when ordering coffee at a cafe since most paper coffee cups are lined with polyethylene and thus not recyclable. The biggest difference for me between this and many other (very great and valid) projects like it is that it heavily emphasizes building a sense of community.
The group who organized this is The Good Empire, who describe themselves as:
"Year of the Planet is an initiative of Good Empire. We’re makers of startups and projects for good.
Inspired by and aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, we bring ideas to life that are good for the world. We help change the things that need to change.
And most importantly, we’re a tribe. A global community of good people, united in purpose, to help create a better and more sustainable future for all.
Good Empire is not a registered charity, but we partner with registered charities in everything we do.
We will take no management fees from Year of the Planet, nor will any of the funds raised come through us. All donations will go directly to our charity partners."Some of those partners being Wildlife Emergecy Fund and the seabin project which is a project close to my heart along with the ocean cleanup project
This post has been what feels like a really long rant on a couple of groups and causes that I'm very passionate about. I'll probably DM one of the other Tildes members who does scheduled posts and see about making a bi-weekly environmentalism thread to discuss what people are doing to make a positive change not only in the local environment, but in their community (a lot of good environmental initiatives also make your neighborhood/local community nicer and happier places :) ), struggles people are having, questions, products they have found, etc. and we'll see if it sticks or if it is just me shouting into the void.
11 votes -
Earth is missing a huge part of its crust. Now we may know why.
15 votes -
The old man and the rising seas
5 votes -
Time's Person of the Year 2019: Greta Thunberg
42 votes -
Denmark plans $30 billion offshore wind island that could power ten million homes
6 votes -
Denmark’s parliament adopted a new climate law on Friday, committing to reach 70% below its 1990 emissions in the next eleven years
11 votes -
See how global warming has changed the world since your childhood
11 votes -
Iceland's prime minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir has urged governments to adopt green and family-friendly priorities, instead of just focusing on economic growth figures
11 votes -
Impacts: Climate change awareness project
6 votes -
Who is Greta Thunberg, the #FridaysForFuture activist?
6 votes -
UN Environment Climate Change Report
6 votes -
Environmental activist, Greta Thunberg is to appear as one of the Christmas guest editors of Radio 4's Today programme
6 votes -
From January, jet fuel suppliers in Norway must blend 0.5% of biofuel in all their aviation fuel – a policy Oslo hopes will lead to lower CO2 emissions
7 votes -
Sweden's central bank sells off bonds from Canadian province of Alberta and parts of Australia over climate concerns
7 votes -
Italian council is flooded immediately after rejecting measures on climate change
8 votes -
London protest ban on Extinction Rebellion ruled unlawful
10 votes -
Climate campaigners are taking Norway's government back to court to oppose its plans to open the Arctic for oil drilling
7 votes -
Pete Buttigieg’s climate vision: Local fixes for a planet in crisis
5 votes -
Nordic Council – Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has refused to accept an environmental award
6 votes -
The European Union, Iceland and Norway agree to deepen their cooperation in climate action
11 votes -
In face of rising sea levels the Netherlands ‘must consider controlled withdrawal’
10 votes -
What's Copenhagen's magic formula to reduce CO2 levels?
5 votes -
How the women of Standing Rock are building sovereign economies
7 votes -
Land without bread: The Green New Deal forsakes America’s countryside
9 votes -
Moving rocks by hand, Colorado volunteers strengthen eroding landscapes to help withstand climate change
7 votes -
Norway's fifth and newest Unicef ambassador is 15-year-old Penelope Lea – the second-youngest ambassador of all time and the first climate activist to be chosen
8 votes -
Rights Livelihood Awards – Greta Thunberg wins 'alternative Nobel' for environmental work
7 votes -
Greta Thunberg to world leaders: 'How dare you – you have stolen my dreams and my childhood'
23 votes -
Study shows Venus may have once enjoyed a temperate climate
8 votes -
Climate change: Impacts 'accelerating' as leaders gather for UN talks
10 votes -
Norway's last coal miners fight for survival against climate policy
6 votes -
Global climate strike sees thousands join children in Australian climate rallies
11 votes -
2019 Ambassador of Conscience Award – Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has been honored by Amnesty International USA
5 votes -
Finland's new government will propose a tax increase later this year on fossil fuel used for transport
6 votes -
Senator Warren's climate change plan: 100% clean energy for America
11 votes -
Worst weather experience?
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the...
Since it's the peak of tropical storm season again, this thread is open for all to share stories and thoughts about weather experiences. Not necessarily concerns about climate change, but the incidents you've had personally, and whatever you've learned about preparation, resilience, and recovery.
I'm no longer a Florida resident, but my contacts are blowing up with concern over Hurricane Dorian.
I've been watching the storm on this nifty site, which has great tools and visualisations to satisfy the most avid weather geeks.
Dorian is likely to be another devastating, small-region, high-intensity buzzsaw, like last year's Hurricane Michael, which practically erased towns in the Florida panhandle, or the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. [I'm not really a good person - I'm having more than a little schadenfreude that Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort is near the center of the storm's predicted path. But I'm not the only person who thought of that.]
According to the Insurance Information Institute, Florida has nearly $600 billion dollars of single family housing at risk from a Category 5 hurricane, leaving aside loss of life and injury.
My stories, compressed for those who've read this before
Some of my friends and colleagues have families still recovering from the impacts of 2017's Hurricanes Irma, Harvey, and Maria.
While I had to deal with these storms' impacts to infrastructure professionally, the hurricanes didn't have enormous personal impact. I was mainly supporting friends or covering for colleagues struggling to help family in Texas, Puerto Rico, and the Caribbean Islands. Our house was eight miles from the coast, so we only dealt with a downed tree and other cleanup, a few hours without power, and some blocked roads.
Because I have dumb hobbies, the most extreme weather dangers I ever encountered were while kayaking and canoeing. Five years ago, I was on a guided ocean kayaking trip that ran into an unpredicted storm squall. Perfect blue skies and calm one minute; near darkness, huge waves, practically solid rain, and 40-knot winds the next. The party got scattered all over half a dozen of the 10,000 Islands. I struggled to get off the windward side of a long isle, so the wind banged my kayak into mangroves for an hour, then I was paddling furiously to avoid being swept into the Gulf of Mexico. But we all survived without major harm, the guide managed to reconnect us without calling for rescue, and we arrived at our destination with good stories. I can only imagine what it's like to be exposed to worse conditions in a hurricane.
Up to that time, the most dangerous weather I'd run into was snow and ice storms. When I was a kid, the Blizzard of 1978 left my family stranded, without phones, power or heat, for five days. We had a fireplace, plenty of hardwood, and an ample store of dried and canned provisions, so it felt more like a rustic adventure than the dire situation it could have been. My brother and I thought 10-foot snowdrifts were the greatest fun ever - we spent more time outside than in, "helping" to dig out by making snow forts and tunnels with the neighbors' kids. Of course, it was followed with a spring of chores like putting up half a kilometer of snow fences, learning to drive a 40-hp farm tractor, and setting up a ham radio antenna and generator, as my city-raised parents had come to grasp what rural life really entailed.
14 votes -
Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg nears end of her Atlantic crossing on zero-carbon yacht
7 votes -
International science expedition reached the North Pole with the Norwegian coastguard's vessel KV Svalbard
5 votes -
Nordics seek common stance on climate after talks in Iceland
6 votes -
Helsinki has revealed a first-of-its kind website meant to empower citizens, businesses and tourists to make more sustainable choices
3 votes -
Horticulturists have planted five palm trees in Laugardalur to investigate how these plants respond to Icelandic weather conditions
9 votes -
Greta Thunberg takes climate fight to Germany’s threatened Hambach Forest
5 votes -
Who will pay for the huge costs of holding back rising seas?
6 votes -
As warming temperatures dramatically reshape Iceland's landscape businesses and the government are spending millions for survival and profit
4 votes -
'Youth and workers uniting behind this crisis': German labor union urges two million members to join global climate strike
5 votes