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27 votes
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Climate change made a two-week-long heatwave in Norway, Sweden and Finland around 2°C hotter and at least ten times more likely, study says
26 votes -
How are you planning for a potentially bleaker future?
I think things are going to get a lot worse until they get better (if they do). I’m not talking about US politics (I dont live there), I’m thinking more about climate change: food and water might...
I think things are going to get a lot worse until they get better (if they do). I’m not talking about US politics (I dont live there), I’m thinking more about climate change: food and water might not be as readily available anymore, never mind other things we take for granted like medicine, transportation, communications, a retirement pension.
It’s hard to articulate but I feel like our future is bleaker than the previous generation’s for the first time in modern history because of factors beyond our control (i.e. neither geopolitical nor economic). Not sure how to prepare for it so I’m wondering how other Tilderinas and Tilderinos deal with it, especially if you have or are planning on having children?
56 votes -
Norway's Northern Lights project is seen as a model for efforts to pump carbon dioxide deep into wells, but high costs remain an obstacle
6 votes -
NASA won't publish key climate change report online, citing 'no legal obligation' to do so
34 votes -
Less rain, more wheat: How Australian farmers defied climate doom
15 votes -
Troubling scenes from an Arctic in full-tilt crisis. The heat that hit Svalbard in February was so intense that scientists could dig into the ground with spoons, "like it was soft ice cream."
41 votes -
The Icelandic landscape is changing, and it's changing us
10 votes -
Not every day that Father Christmas briefs his elves about the hazards of sunstroke, but this summer northern Finland has seen temperatures hover around 30°C for days on end
10 votes -
In landmark opinion, World Court says countries must address climate change threat
37 votes -
Norway wants to be Europe's carbon dump – aiming to capture carbon dioxide from factories and bury it beneath the North Sea
10 votes -
In one of the top Arctic birding destinations in the world, environmental and health challenges are threatening some of the seabirds that are part of Norway's unique coastal ecosystem
6 votes -
What Danish climate migration drama, Families Like Ours, gets wrong about rising sea levels
9 votes -
Unique 1.5m year-old ice to be melted to unlock mystery
16 votes -
Nebraska sues neighboring Colorado over how much water it’s drawing from the South Platte River
19 votes -
India's solar boom keeps coal use in check so far in 2025
13 votes -
Letter to Grand Chiefs
Long ago, Cree leader Captain Swan visited the Athabasca area. In 1715, he described a scene to Hudson’s Bay Company fur trader James Knight: “... there is a Certain Gum or pitch that runs down...
Long ago, Cree leader Captain Swan visited the Athabasca area. In 1715, he described a scene to Hudson’s Bay Company fur trader James Knight: “... there is a Certain Gum or pitch that runs down the river in such abundance that [Indians] cannot land but at certain places.” This was the first written reference to bitumen in Canada. Bitumen forms when organic matter is buried and subjected to heat and pressure over geological timescales. That organic matter was primarily algae and plants, which had sequestered carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere by photosynthesis, thereby locking CO₂ in place, significantly reducing atmospheric CO₂ levels, and helping sustain all aerobic life.
In 1859, John Tyndall explained how atmospheric gases absorb heat from the sun as infrared radiation. His paper details an early understanding of the greenhouse effect. Scientists have long since linked CO₂ emissions—burning refined bitumen and coal—to changing Earth’s climate. A 1912 Popular Mechanics article states, “The furnaces of the world are now burning about 2 billion tons of coal a year. When this is burned, uniting with oxygen, it adds about 7 billion tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere yearly. This tends to make the air a more effective blanket for the earth and raise its temperature.” A century on, we’re burning 500% more fossil fuels.
Wishful thoughts will not prevent Earth’s global average temperature from increasing as we combust fossil fuels back into atmospheric CO₂. And while our generation reaps the rewards of inexpensive energy, our grandchildren will face the consequences of repaying this debt. A debt undermining the ancient Haudenosaunee philosophy that today’s decisions should result in a sustainable world seven generations from now.
Building a better world for our children requires energy—yet doing so by burning fossil fuels to the point of climate destabilization twists irony into generational betrayal far removed from sustainability.
In a 2013 experiment, University of Berkeley researchers found that breathing in a CO₂ concentration of 1,000 parts per million (ppm) indoors causes a measurable decline in intellectual capacity; at 2,500 ppm, initiative and strategic thinking declined to a dysfunctional level, which has since been corroborated by other researchers, including a 2023 meta-analysis on the short-term exposure to indoor CO₂ levels versus cognitive task performance. These cognitive effects become particularly concerning when viewed against atmospheric trends. On June 2, 2025, atmospheric CO₂ surpassed 429 ppm, a significant increase from the 318 ppm measured at Mauna Loa on June 15, 1959.
https://i.ibb.co/yFcXJqCy/graph.png
The graph illustrates a troubling acceleration in CO₂ emissions. At the current growth rate of 3.8 ppm per year, atmospheric CO₂ could reach 1,000 ppm in six generations (150 years). A 2021 study published in Nature emphasized the urgent need for action, stating that global oil and gas production must decline by 3% annually until 2050. Moreover, to limit warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels (1850–1900), an additional 25% of oil reserves must remain untouched.
Against this backdrop, political leaders advocate for increased fossil fuel extraction. Danielle Smith wants to unlock Alberta’s “$14 trillion in oil wealth” to “benefit millions of Canadians for generations.”
Short-term economic benefits derived from resource exploitation have repeatedly led to gradual, often unheeded, environmental degradation. This pattern repeatedly culminated in ecological and economic crashes, devastating the very communities who initially profited. Notable cases include Mesopotamian salinization, the Classic Maya collapse, the Ancestral Puebloan collapse, Norse Greenland settlements, Easter Island’s deforestation, the Dust Bowl, the Aral Sea’s desiccation, and the Grand Banks cod collapse. While some nations have sustainably managed resource wealth, the immediate economic pressures and political incentives that drive extraction often overshadow long-term planning.
The question is not: “How many Canadian generations will benefit?”
The question is: “How many generations will suffer, globally?”
Will we learn from history? Will we set an example for the next seven generations?
Or will we build more oil and gas pipelines, condemning our descendants to an unsustainable future?
Hereby released into the public domain. Feel free to adapt, correct, and send to representatives.
9 votes -
‘It’s too late’: David Suzuki says the fight against climate change is lost
33 votes -
China's emissions may now be falling
29 votes -
Scientists estimate European heatwave caused 2,300 deaths last week
32 votes -
Copenhagen is adapting to a warmer world with rain tunnels and sponge parks
21 votes -
Denmark wants to champion the EU's beleaguered green deal in its presidency. But convincing other states won't be easy.
11 votes -
Collaborating with Indigenous artists and sampling melting glaciers, the dance duo Bicep are championing Arctic culture – and documenting a collapsing world
6 votes -
In war zones, a race to save key seeds needed to feed the world
12 votes -
Norway launches full-scale industrial carbon capture project with billions in subsidies – carbon dioxide shipped to North Sea and injected into reservoirs of oil majors
12 votes -
Bergen in Norway has been building one of the world's most advanced trash systems, using vacuum tubes to whisk waste away
13 votes -
New study shows regions with best potential to regrow trees and suck climate-heating CO2 from the air
16 votes -
Saving the sea cows of Vanuatu. There’s still hope for “the friendliest ‘fish’ in the water.”
6 votes -
How the little-known ‘dark roof’ lobby may be making US cities hotter
30 votes -
How I started studying ways to put seaweed to use
4 votes -
Smoke to pour into the US as Canada wildfires force province’s largest evacuation in ‘living memory’
41 votes -
Groundwater is rapidly declining in the Colorado River Basin, satellite data show
31 votes -
The US EV and hybrid vehicle tax increase tucked into Donald Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’
26 votes -
A newly surfaced document reveals the US beef industry’s secret climate plan
35 votes -
Konstantine Vlasis never imagined that a single track on a Sigur Rós album would lead him to study the melting glaciers of Iceland
7 votes -
A comfortable life for 8.5 billion people would require only 30% of current global resource and energy use
66 votes -
In the last decade, extensive fungal growth has developed in Danish museums parallel to climate change, challenging occupational health and heritage preservation
22 votes -
The crypto racket - public officials at all levels are propping up a Texas Bitcoin mining boom that’s threatening water and energy systems while afflicting locals with noise pollution
20 votes -
Nearly 70% of Swedish territory is covered by forests, with half belonging to the private sector – what does that mean for the nation's economic and environmental ambitions
8 votes -
Running the first 100km of the oldest river in the world to see what all the fuss is about. Unlike rivers affected by local populations of people, the Finke is affected by those who don’t live there.
7 votes -
UK experiments to reflect sunlight one step closer
16 votes -
Startups are making synthetic butter and oil
12 votes -
Thousands of falling satellites put the atmosphere at risk
21 votes -
New study attributes nine trillion dollars of climate change related damages to just five companies, and outlines how they could be held accountable for specific local damages
42 votes -
Eight of the top ten online shows are spreading climate misinformation
33 votes -
In 2024, the warmest year on record in Europe according to the EU's Copernicus system, Swedish and Norwegian glaciers melted by an average of 1.8 metres
9 votes -
‘The ice is not freezing as it should’: supply roads to Canada’s Indigenous communities under threat from climate crisis
14 votes -
Heritage Foundation and allies discuss dismantling the EU
40 votes -
In 2019, scientist Steffen Olsen took a startling photo of huskies appearing to walk on water – photo quickly went viral as it revealed reality of Greenland's rapidly melting ice
15 votes -
For more than twenty years, scientists have followed polar bears in Norway's Arctic archipelago to understand how they may adapt to changing threats as the ice they depend on melts
3 votes