Current plans and policies will lead to global temperatures rising between 2.6C and 3.1C this century, a new report finds.
Current plans and policies will lead to 2.6 to 3.1 degrees Celsius of global warming this century, with zero chance of limiting the temperature increase to the totemic 1.5C target agreed in Paris in 2015, according to a new report out Thursday.
Well lovely innit. Cannot wait for ecosystem collapse and even less snow in winter. Thinking about it this way I won't even be able to teach my kids skiing once I have them.
It's one of the reasons I'm considering not having kids, even though I want kids. I don't want to create a human to grow up and live in a disaster like that.
Fwiw, it’s a very slow moving disaster. We’re already committed to a disaster and worse every day, but it’ll take years or decades to fully manifest
One horrifying article I read was talking about collapse of AMOC circulation. He was saying we don’t have a good projection of what would stop it, but there’s a chance we already have and it may take as long as 200 years for the currents to stop moving. We may have already wrecked Western Europes climate irreparably for our great grand children and we have three generations to watch it coming, knowing it’s our fault
Similar for other tipping points. We do t have a precise idea where we hit them but there’s a chance we already have but won’t see the effects for decades.
The ozone solution was changing one chemical for another similar chemical.
Combatting climate change will require lifestyle changes, reduced comfort of living and other sacrifices. Nobody is getting elected with those promises.
In case it makes someone pay attention, I really want to know the absolute drop dead point. It’s impossible to instantly and completely stop all manmade carbon emissions, but if we could, what is the point where that is still not enough to achieve our target limit? Have we already passed that?
20 years ago, probably more. The environment has its own inertia, plus we've set feedbacks into motion that would still go on even if we stopped all we do. Our own emissions was never a large part but more of a catalyst to change the stability of the whole. Cutting it now or not long ago was too late to stop the reaction.
In case it makes someone pay attention, I really want to know the absolute drop dead point. It’s impossible to instantly and completely stop all manmade carbon emissions, but if we could, what is the point where that is still not enough to achieve our target limit? Have we already passed that?