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13 votes
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Climate scientists are urging Nordic ministers to prevent global warming from causing a major change in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
10 votes -
Natural sinks of forests and peat were key to Finland's ambitious target to be carbon neutral by 2035 – but now, the land has started emitting more greenhouse gases than it stores
17 votes -
Slow change can be radical change
6 votes -
Where environmentalists went wrong / It’s time for “effective environmentalism"
27 votes -
US Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to invest $76 million closing legacy oil & gas wells in Pennsylvania
16 votes -
What works: Groundbreaking evaluation of climate policy measures over two decades
22 votes -
Léna Lazare is the new face of climate activism—and she's carrying a pickax
26 votes -
Sweden has cut 80% of its net emissions since 1990 – while growing its economy twofold. How have they done it?
31 votes -
‘Morally, nobody’s against it’: Brazil’s radical plan to tax global super-rich to tackle climate crisis
61 votes -
Climate hero or villain? As it rapidly adopts clean technologies while drilling furiously for oil and gas, Norway is a paradox.
11 votes -
The controversy of carbon footprints
18 votes -
Powerful climate change deniers knowingly committed heinous crimes, and they should be put on Nuremberg style trials
I'm gonna try to be brief. This is the worst I've ever felt, weather-wise, in my life, and it's only the start of summer. It's heavily negatively affecting both my physical and mental health. I...
I'm gonna try to be brief. This is the worst I've ever felt, weather-wise, in my life, and it's only the start of summer. It's heavily negatively affecting both my physical and mental health. I can't even properly work. I don't have AC. I can't afford it. Everybody around me is suffering very similarly.
I've been following climate crisis for years, but I've never thought I'd see such an extreme worsening this early. Even if I knew in theory that anomalies like this could happen, as it's very widely agreed upon that they would, it's much different to live through. It's hell on earth.
I'm one of the luckier ones, relatively speaking. There are over hundred thousand people dying from heatwaves each year. It's probably much higher than officially reported, because most governments don't track heatwave deaths. Millions and millions of people in India have been experiencing bigger and bigger water crises. Just in 2019, 600 million people faced a water crisis in India.. Hundreds of millions of people in Africa are suffering due to climate change related climate extremes and food security crises.
I also just found out that a location in Antarctica exhibited 70F (38C) higher than normal temperatures this year. Faster than expected, right?
I think this is inexcusable. Oil companies and such knew what was coming. There are countless documents and studies detailing this. Here are a few.
- Exxon confirmed global warming due to their emissions was happening in 1982.
- American Patroleum Institute similary knew in 1980.
- Exxon knowingly spread climate change denialism in response (source 1, source 2)
- Even in 2015, Exxon was dodging responsibility, telling people to "read the documents". So, two scientists, Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes, did that. And found out that Exxon acknowledged global warming in the internal documents, while they denied it in public (article 1, source 2). In other words, it's been empirically shown that they fucking manipulated the public with full knowledge.
- Exxon is not alone. ExxonMobil, Chevrontexaco, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, and Conocophillips spent 3.6 billion dollars for lobbying in US alone during 1986-2015.. 61% of these expenditures are after 2006, when climate change started becoming a hot topic. So, when they attracted attention, they doubled down.
- Another document is of American Patroleum Institute from 1998, showing they intentionally focused on exaggerating the uncertainties of climate science in front of the public.
- Big Oil still opposes science and us. A study published in 2019 shows that ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron, BP, and Total spent 1 billion dollars on lobbying and branding after the 2016 Paris Agreement.
- Oil companies are not alone. A study examining the 2000-2016 time-frame in US found that "fossil fuel and transportation corporations, utilities, and affiliated trade associations" are all major climate lobbyists. Only 3% of the total climate change lobbying was done by environmental organizations and renewable energy corporations.
These crimes are inexcusable. The people responsible should pay for them. And these should be treated as crimes against humanity and the planet, of the highest degree. These people don't deserve anything but to pay. They are the evil, who, in great awareness, have unreversibly damaged the planet, caused untold suffering. They still continue to do this, and even if they stopped now (hah!), their evil will continue to haunt humanity and a myriad of other species for unimaginable generations.
They should pay.
68 votes -
Carbon pricing works, meta-review finds
17 votes -
EU's Green Deal improved its climate performance: a 1.5°C pathway is close
17 votes -
I understand climate scientists’ despair – but stubborn optimism may be our only hope
26 votes -
Climate policy is working – double down on what’s succeeding instead of despairing over what’s not
48 votes -
China and California are leading the way on climate cooperation. Others should follow.
12 votes -
Two years to save the planet, says UN climate chief
53 votes -
Switzerland’s climate failures breached human rights, top court rules
4 votes -
California is preparing to defend itself — and the nation — against Donald Trump 2.0
31 votes -
Natural gas is scamming America
25 votes -
They grow your berries and peaches, but often lack one item: insurance
9 votes -
Connecticut, USA wants to penalize insurers for backing fossil-fuel projects
13 votes -
California, USA must triple its rate of carbon emissions reductions to reach 2030 target, report says
16 votes -
Analysis: Donald Trump election win could add 4bn tonnes to US emissions by 2030
11 votes -
Climate deniers don't deny climate change any more. They do something worse.
65 votes -
EU countries already hitting some of their sustainable energy targets for 2030 – Study finds ‘systematic progress’ achieved in 2010s with some states reaching targets a decade early
20 votes -
Oil firms forced to consider full climate effects of new drilling, following landmark Norwegian court ruling
9 votes -
Oil companies will soon pay fees for emitting a climate ‘super-pollutant’
11 votes -
Rebecca Solnit: Slow change can be radical change
19 votes -
The future of the cruise ship – emissions-free wind power
17 votes -
Cobalt-rich Congo votes with crucial role in climate change
7 votes -
Developing countries emit 2/3 of the world's carbon: they can't afford the lending terms of renewable projects
38 votes -
Nations at climate summit agree to move away from fossil fuels
24 votes -
Lars Aagaard, Danish climate minister, says farmers deserving most success on the European market should be those who emit the least carbon per tonne of food produced
18 votes -
Why did NEPA peak in 2016?
6 votes -
One huge contradiction is undoing our best climate efforts
34 votes -
Denmark is preparing to make a significant pledge toward a new climate disaster fund, breaking ranks with other developed countries
12 votes -
The unexpected climate policy that could tackle both national debt and China: Carbon pricing has the potential to become a bipartisan policy
26 votes -
China says it wants to bolster climate cooperation with US as California Gov. Gavin Newsom visits Beijing
14 votes -
Germany’s terrible trains are no joke for a nation built on efficiency
23 votes -
Sweden's minority-run coalition announced on Wednesday it would be cutting funding for climate and environmental measures next year
10 votes -
Copying US president Franklin Roosevelt, Joe Biden uses executive power to create a New Deal-style American Climate Corps
60 votes -
US President Joe Biden's decision to skip Climate Ambition Summit called a 'disgrace'
24 votes -
It's the beginning of the end for global oil demand, IEA chief says
13 votes -
Three big, bold ideas to douse the flames of a world on fire
10 votes -
Norway has a chance to transform climate finance – the country's windfall from the energy crisis should be used to underwrite investments in developing countries
17 votes -
Carbon removal should be a public good
30 votes -
Taliban bringing water to Afghanistan’s parched plains via massive canal
32 votes