• ewe@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Every time I see these I see these climate change related issues (which is now multiple times a day), I get the same sinking feeling in my stomach like I’m behind on work and don’t have enough time to do it and I’ll soon be in trouble for letting things get too far behind. That feeling keeps me up, causes me stress, and is generally not a comfortable way to live. This just fucking sucks.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I hate to say it, but I keep avoiding articles about climate change for this reason. I can’t do it every time, obviously, but it just gives me such stress. We’re all so powerless while corporations destroy our planet.

      • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        Have you tried separating your recycling out? It’ll help offset the cruise ships that each put out around 250,000 cars worth of straight up pollution a year, without factoring in other impacts.

        • vaultdweler13@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          And thats just the cruise ships imagine how much cargo ships output, admitedly cargo ships actually serve a purpose. Cruise ships are idols to our decadence and hubris.

          I dream of bloody knives and car bombs.

          • Praise our cargo ship overlords for bringing clothes that rip after the third wash and electronics that malfunction after half a year to us!

            Joke aside, they are integral to the global economy, but we could cut back a lot on wasteful production and consumption, reducing the transportation needed.

            • vaultdweler13@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Absolutely, food is one thing but cheap shitty tech is another. Frankly speaking ive never encountered a situation where the cheap shitty stuff was any better than the older expensive stuff.

              But im also into weird old tech so the fact that ill use a beat up old car radio instead of a 10 buck radio from big lots is not saying much.

        • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          The solution to that, the systemic impersonal solution, is going to be ending the production of single use plastics. While there’s little you can do about recycling, you can imagine if you’ll be complaining about that.

          • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            Also if we removed single use plastics, but didn’t dramatically cut back on everything we do that uses them, then we’d create more pollution with alternative methods trying to fill the gap. A global change is unavoidable, whether it is chosen or forced upon everyone by circumstance.

            • jasondj@ttrpg.network
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              1 year ago

              This is part of the issue that a lot of people don’t get.

              Plastics are, largely, petrochemicals. We have plastics because we have oil.

              Use glass because it’s more recyclable? Glass is heavier and more fragile, meaning more cost to ship and more breakage in transit.

              • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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                1 year ago

                Yeah… we use single use plastics because they’re basically an industrial miracle production wise. Dirt cheap, super easy to use, innumerable applications… and all the drawbacks are post-production and someone else’s problem. A tough addiction to break.

              • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Use glass because it’s more recyclable? Glass is heavier and more fragile, meaning more cost to ship and more breakage in transit.

                Meaning more local production and collection.

      • penguin@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I largely tuned out of climate change news a long time ago. I still care about it. I vote for it and have donated relatively large amounts of money to environmental charities. But otherwise nothing I do makes a difference.

    • gosling@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Don’t be too harsh on yourself, big corporations are the main cause of climate change. Unless we all collectively decide to give these companies a wake up call, I’m afraid there’s very little you can do alone

      • IrrationalAndroid@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Is there anything reasonable that we (those who have interest in living “like before” and won’t die of age within 30 years) can achieve? I feel like many things are very out of reach, and the population is just too heterogeneous to agree on something. Older folks where I live just do not give a fuck, and elected someone whose major interest is in removing rights from people they actively hate. At least one big city where I live has been without water nor electricity for several hours (days?) because the heat has messed out the infrastructure, and I feel like even in my country barely anybody is talking about it… It’s just very discouraging, I want to shift my perspective, but it’s not easy.

        • 🦘min0nim🦘@aussie.zone
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          1 year ago

          Yes, there are things you can and should be doing.

          People blaming ‘corporations’ while not doing anything themselves are a huge part of the problem. Out of the 100 largest corporations contributing the most CO2, almost all of them are fuel and energy based.

          So, number one - drives less, or don’t drive at all. This might change where or how you live.

          Number 2, buy 100% green power or install your own PV.

          These 2 things alone can be contributing up to 50% of your own greenhouse emissions. This isn’t ‘corporations’, it’s us buying power and driving around.

          After that everyday consumption is huge. So don’t buy shit to just throw it away. Only buy what’s necessary. Spend more on fewer things, and things that will last.

          And finally, do these things because you care. If enough people make some changes. It starts to seem normal. Then others do it too. And vote.

          The number of smart, tech savvy people here who think some boats and random companies are the source of impending catastrophe are sadly mistaken. The actual information on what’s causing and contributing is well researched and easy to find. You’ll be able to find an online calculator for your country which will give an averaged breakdown of your own emissions. You can use that to keep drilling into what actions will have the biggest impacts.

          Everyone needs to make changes to the way we live. Some need to go first for others to follow.

      • dangblingus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Big corporations…that we keep rewarding with our money, incentivizing them to not change what they’re doing. Human consumption is the largest driver of climate change.

      • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Corporations can’t do these things with the public being complicit.

        We don’t hold politicians accountable and we just consume consume consume like crazy.

        • LucidNightmare@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          “Big companies only do what they do when the governments that they paid with bribes or “lobby” money look the other way while they fuck the planet up left and right like it’s a race to the end”

          Fixed it for you. Stop excusing the rich, and trying to place the blame on the consumers, friend. It’s disgusting.

          • dangblingus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The blame is on everyone. But if consumers… you know… stopped consuming so much garbage food, electronics, packaging for their shitty food and shitty electronics, cars, gasoline, etc, maybe the large companies wouldn’t produce so much of it.

            • LucidNightmare@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Such a bad argument again.

              My friend. The corporations have spent BILLIONS of dollars making sure all my options are as thin as possible.

              Tell me, friend. Where can I get the GOOD and HEALTHY food, the GOOD electronics? WHERE can I get these things WITHOUT spending the arm and leg that I DO NOT HAVE to spend? Enlighten me as to why you choose to blame the consumers whose options are LIMITED by the corporations….?

          • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            Or switch to a seafood-based diet, which has a much smaller CO2 footprint than land-based agriculture.

            • such_fifty_bucks@lemmy.one
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              1 year ago

              “just eat seafood”. Brought to you by the comment thread on the article about the fact that the oceans are half way to literally fucking boiling.

              • I_Miss_Daniel@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                To quote The Goodies. “Why are you dumping oil and potatoes into the ocean?” “Well when the ocean is full of fish, potatoes and oil, I’ll throw in a match. Flash! Fry! Frizzle… Fish and Chips! Loads and Loads of Fish and Chips.”

                (This is from memory, will be somewhat paraphrased. Also see https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0591041/)

              • KnitWit@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Well, I can’t give you gold obviously, so here’s my first comment ever. That comment was fucking gold!

            • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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              1 year ago

              We already massively overfish, is that really your solution? It’ll mean more intense factory farming of seafood, creating huge amounts of water based pollution.

              • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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                1 year ago

                Not all types of fish are overfished, some (like haddock) are sustainable. Just as some crops are farmed responsibly, and others (like California almonds) are not.

                • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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                  1 year ago

                  I see you noticed that mackerel had it’s “sustainable” status removed. Sad times. ^^’

                  I didn’t think Haddock had gotten back on the sustainable side either, most things can be done sustainably up to a certain volume. If the entire population turns its eye on it then demand far outstrips supply and goodbye sustainability.

        • dangblingus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You’re being downvoted, but why? Human greed also extends to consumers. We don’t have to buy a thing because it was paraded around in front of us. I hate the “consumers have no agency, they have to buy stuff!” mentality. It’s morally bankrupt and just results in more finger pointing and zero action. Stop buying crap.

    • sharpiemarker@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      And the worst part is, average citizens like yourself aren’t a massive burden on the environment. It’s people like Elon Musk flying personal jets across the world for dinner, who are actively contributing to the death of the planet.

      • golamas1999@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The jets are bad but what is worse are the handle full of billionaires and csuite execs who have the money and power to decide company policies and bribe politicians and governments: lobbying, independent expenditures, gala dinners, super pacs, incentives, revolving doors, private fundraising, paid speeches; to look the other way so they can pollute however much they want.

        Nothing is Ethical under Capitalism.

        Social Democracy is better but still exports the suffering to the global south.

        Workers of the world must unite to over come the absolute insanity of the capital class.

      • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Unfortunately, everyone participates and it adds up. If you want to compare such personal consumption like jets, then the rich account for about 15% of the global emissions.

        Here’s a chart:

        from this report: https://policy-practice.oxfam.org/resources/carbon-inequality-in-2030-per-capita-consumption-emissions-and-the-15c-goal-621305/

        The share of total global emissions associated with the consumption of the richest 1% is set to continue to grow, from 13% in 1990, to 15% in 2015 and 16% in 2030.

        If you want to include the rich’s capital, which you should, because that has to change:

        the bottom 50% of the world population emitted 12% of global emissions in 2019, whereas the top 10% emitted 48% of the total. Since 1990, the bottom 50% of the world population has been responsible for only 16% of all emissions growth, whereas the top 1% has been responsible for 23% of the total. While per-capita emissions of the global top 1% increased since 1990, emissions from low- and middle-income groups within rich countries declined. Contrary to the situation in 1990, 63% of the global inequality in individual emissions is now due to a gap between low and high emitters within countries rather than between countries. Finally, the bulk of total emissions from the global top 1% of the world population comes from their investments rather than from their consumption. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-022-00955-z

        But if you imagine that the petite bourgeois lifestyle of McMansion in suburbia, cars and driving around everywhere, eating boatloads of primary calories, and the rest of the consumption isn’t contributing, you should read more. Here’s a start: https://www.versobooks.com/books/3691-the-imperial-mode-of-living

      • aport@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Sorry but this is not true at all. Your regular average citizen demands products whose production, transportation, and disposal is responsible for massive amounts of emissions.

        If you buy cheap Chinese shit off Amazon, or Big Macs, a new phone every year, you’re part of the problem.

        • PM_ME_YOUR_ZOD_RUNES@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago
          1. Be big business
          2. Spend decades chasing profits using any means necessary.
          3. Make so much money that the average person can barely get by.
          4. Sell them the cheapest shit possible that they have no choice but to buy cause they’re poor as fuck.
          5. Have morons on the internet blame the average person instead of greedy corporations/billionaires/government.
          6. ???
          7. Profit!
    • Monkeyhog@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Really? The feeling I get when I read articles like this is a resigned feeling of “No shit, we’ve only been hearing warnings of this for the past 30 years. People are fucking stupid”

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        There used to be plausible deniability. “Maybe it won’t really be that bad, even though we should be acting in case it is.”

        Now it’s more of a “I wonder where the various lines are and how many we’ve already crossed, which one will be next, and how soon we’ll notice it.”

        Have you noticed the number of insects is way down this year? Maybe I’m wrong. They do still gather in the lights (which might be another part of the fucking problem…) but there just doesn’t seem to be as many as there used to be this year.

        • jasondj@ttrpg.network
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          The irony is that if we did act as if it would be that bad, it wouldn’t be that bad because we would have mitigated the worst of it, and it’d become a laughing-stock for non-critical thinkers.

          See also: Y2K…or more recently, comparing COVID death rates for vaccinated vs unvaccinated populations.

    • Parallax@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You can only do so much. Life was set up this way for us by countless generations before us. You can reduce your energy requirements, reduce/reuse/recycle, but it will only help so much at the individual level. Never stop trying. Never stop trying to convince your friends and family to reduce their footprint. I bug my SO every time they put something recyclable in the trash or they buy something we don’t need.

      But the world is burning because of greed and we can’t individually put an end to that. Live your life, do what you can, share love. It’s the best we can do right now.

    • lamprivate@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      I’ve just started to cut off feelings about it entirely - I can’t handle seeing this stuff everyday. I’m just resigned that it’s too late and live your life while you can.

    • Art35ian@lemmy.world
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      I like to look on the bright side, in that climate change will either wipe humans off the map or send us back to the Stone Age so we no longer have any real impact.

      Both scenarios will heal the planet, animals will re-populate, and homeostasis will again be restored. Checks and balances. We’ll just be another animal that that got out of control, which nature corrected, like it’s done thousands of times over with every animal that’s ever been out of control.

      A healthy world. I like that outcome, with or without us.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        I don’t think you realize how much even stone age humans fucked up the planet. Half of Australia’s forests were burned down and most of America’s megafauna was hunted to extinction and the people who did it had little more than stone tools.

        • Art35ian@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, I read Sapiens too.

          Still, I suspect it’ll shift the balance of power away from us for long enough to allow nature to take back some control. As a species we’ve lost our way and we won’t stop until the planet is dead or it wipes us out. That’s the bottom line.

          This could be the only planet within a million light years with complex, conscious life and we’re systematically destroying it for conveniences like single serve ketchup.

          • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            This could be the only planet in the universe with any kind of life, but humans have never been good at working together in large groups, we just can’t really deal with more than a few hundred people at most.

          • darthfabulous42069@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            It’s amazing how positive solutions never come to the minds of anyone who talks about this.

            Human expansion into space is a likely outcome too. Haven’t you considered that?

            • Shardikprime@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Hope in space industry being developed by the so hated corporations from the internet? Spear headed by capitalism? In a thread about climate change? On this site? You surely jest

              • darthfabulous42069@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Unironically it’s probably our only hope to save ourselves and nature itself, or what will be left of it if predictions pan out.

      • Katana314@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Now I wonder if some future intelligent race could ever come across us through archaeological digs, and we become that “highly advanced race that died out” that’s so common in fiction.

    • jantin@lemmy.world
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      This is the reason I finally pulled the plug on Reddit. Too much r/climate and others like that in my feed.

      Now let’s see how long will Lemmy last. Ultimately I’ll just let myself die while playing Baldurs Gate 3 during a random heatwave in bliss ignorance of what’s going on in the ocean or Florida or Italy or wherever.

  • Arsenal4ever@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Oil and gas companies are awesome at branding. We need to be better. We should name the heatwaves after oil companies.

    We should also name the hurricane season. So the Exxon Mobile Heatwave, and the British Petroleum Hurricane Season. The Suncor Forest Fires.

    etc.

    • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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      We? No. We’ll just be uncomfortable. Our kids? They’re going to slowly cook to death as they’re running out of food/water/oxygen. Or, y’know, get blown up in one of the wars fighting over scraps of food/water/oxygen.

      But look on the bright side: we’re on track to beat last fiscal year’s profit margin! If we do that, we’ll get a free company branded pencil and one ticket to use some leave-without-pay at you manager’s discretion – and the regional manager gets another vacation home!!

    • schroedingershat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Mass famines and heat that kills without AC coming summer of 2024 or 2025. Won’t kill the global north too much yet, but it will be one of the biggest deadly events in history for the rest of the world.

      • whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Military journalist Gwyn Dyer reported on this almost 2 decades ago.

        The global militaries have been planning for this for years. You see those ships with refugees from northern Africa? That volume is going to ramp up plus Mediterranean countries are going to exodus north to the Nordic states and immigration is going to lock the fuck down. People are going to die by the millions. Maybe not in 2 years but this is our future.

        On the plus side, and I am fucking saying this sarcastically, at least it’s the “right people” dying which is to say those not white and those not rich.

    • VentraSqwal@links.dartboard.social
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      1 year ago

      People are already dying to the effects. We know climate change can cause more and higher intensity hurricanes, more droughts, fires, famines, wilder weather swings, floods, and wars and refugee crises, etc. We know these things are increasing and we know people are already dying to them now.

      So while you can’t pin any individual disaster to climate change, we already know it’s causing deaths.

      As for if we’re all going to die? Probably not all of us, so if you’re lucky and don’t mind you or your kids living in a Mad Max world, you can relax a little.

    • SasquatchBanana@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No. We have a long ways away before the human population will be wiped out due to climate change. Most likely around 100 or so years. The issue is what happens before then. Increasing temperatures will mean less water for crops creating food crisis. It will mean rising water level which means people living in low coastal cities will have to move. There is going to be mass migration which people do not like (Conservative fearmongering and look at how the homeless are treated). The food shortages and migration will cause unprecedented poverty. Poverty is correlated to crime so there is going to be an uptick of it. If we don’t cut our carbon emission by 2030, we are going to see water wars and food wars by 2050.

      What do these food and water wars mean? It can mean a lot. The rich will most likely be fine and continue with their yachts and private jets which are the biggest contributors carbon emissions. There will be more and more wars breaking out and even 1st world countries will be affected. This can lead to use of nuclear weapons which will continue to cut the human population and make things less inhabitable. Over time the human population will be cut and climate change acceleration will most likely slow down but not fully stop. There’s also a feedback loop to the planet heating up. As polar ice caps melt and the planet heats up, it may naturally continue on its own until it equalizes. It can go up to like 10 degrees which, well, I hope i am not on the planet at that time.

      Not everything is hopeless. We have a lot of bright scientists and we are in an era of unprecedented wealth. I do believe when it comes down to it, the world will unite and we will be able to mitigate enough of it and create solutions. Mass solar panels is a good one. Building nuclear reactors for the future use is another. Some solutions have been suggested like turning the sky white and other stuff. Public transit is another thing picking up and will greatly reduce carbon emissions. Just remember, a majority of the pollution comes from the use of private jets, yachts, and cruise ships. People will get hungry. There is one group of people who are at fault and I think the French found the solution to it.

      • squidzorz@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We have a long ways away before the human population will be wiped out due to climate change. Most likely around 100 or so years.

        You realize that would be the grandchildren of people alive today, right? That’s VERY soon lol…

      • solstice@lemmy.world
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        No. We have a long ways away before the human population will be wiped out due to climate change…Not everything is hopeless. We have a lot of bright scientists…

        I said something similar in a thread yesterday and got savagely shat on by everyone. The thread was about people literally not having children because they’re worried about climate change. I said have kids if you want, don’t if you don’t, but it’s insane to make such a major life decision based on some nebulous calamity that may or may not happen in your lifetime, or at all. I’m extremely concerned about climate change but goddamn some people are nuts.

        • SasquatchBanana@lemmy.world
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          I think they are correct. We are living in a time with the greatest wealth gap. As climate change continues we are going to have food shortages and water wars. That is not en environment to bring a kid into.

    • moitoi@feddit.de
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      No, we won’t. At least, the millennials are the last safe generation.

      What will slowly die at 38°C are sperm. Hopefully, it will affect the reproduction of some roten brain about climate change.

    • GustavoM@lemmy.world
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      Spoilers: Third world war will start at October, to go through clueless and senseless deaths all around the world, for uhhhhhh…6 years’ish.

      Then (not really sure beyond that tbh) we will have a worldwide apparition of Our Lady of Garanbandal… something something “folks will die of shame by witnessing their sins being committed”, etcetc. The antichrist will come, christians will be hunted like animals.

      Demons will manifestate, wander around. Everyone will accept em as saviors, praise em, etc. Lucifer will claim victory, etc.

      Then, 2nd cometh of Christ, etc, judge everyone, etc. Hell will close, etcetc. New Jerusalem, etc.

      So um… yeah. 10 years at best, 20 years at worst.

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        1 year ago

        The flying spaghetti monster beckons: we shall all return to the sauce! Some time after dinner, most likely.

        R’amen.

  • fearout@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Holy crap. So coral bleaching in that area is basically guaranteed at this point. And some plankton and algae can’t really survive if those temperatures persist.

    Also, as temperature rises, water holds less and less dissolved oxygen. At the same time metabolic rates of fish increase, which makes them require even more oxygen. The scary thing about that is at some point they lose the ability to get enough oxygen to sustain life, and then bam — the whole species dies in a day.

    Remember those rivers of millions of dead fish? Yeah, it’s like that.

    • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      All of these things are bad, but the effect on phytoplankton is most frightening of all. Diatoms provide 50-85% of our global oxygen supply. Not only are rising temperatures a problem for them, but ocean acidification also eats away at their silica-based shells. But it does it slowly so by the time they die, they are in deep water where no other diatoms are around to reuse the silica.

      Luckily, there are other ways of recycling diatom remains. The most notable example is the dried lake bed that used to be part of Lake Chad when that lake was far bigger and held many living diatoms. Due to natural changes in climate, the water dried up and that area is now part of the Sahara Desert. About 100 days a year, winds kick the ancient diatom dust high into the atmosphere where it is carried across the Atlantic Ocean and then it settles across South America.

      This is a big reason the Amazon Rainforest is so lush. Diatomaceous fertilizer carried all the way from Africa. And since more plants means more photosynthesis, it causes a lot of water that would have otherwise been locked away in the ground to evaporate through transpiration. All of this excess water is blown westward towards the Andes mountain range. In narrower parts of the Andes, the dense Amazonian clouds overcome the rain shadow effect to precipitate across the west side of the Andes.

      This rainwater causes erosion of quartz, which is ground into fine silica dust. As silt, this dust is washed into the Pacific Ocean, where diatoms absorb the silica and use it to reproduce. In a beautiful global balancing act, as diatom-heavy lakes in Africa dry up, the remains of those diatoms cause a chain reaction that ends up causing a huge increase of diatoms on the opposite side of the globe.

      Great, right? It would be if we weren’t replacing so much of the Amazon Rainforest with monoculture farms which don’t have nearly the same evapotranspiration effect as the flora of the natural ecosystem. So, not only are we baking the diatoms, not only are we dissolving them with acid, we’re also removing one of their most critical reproductive resources.

      It’s like we discovered how resilient the planet is and how hard it is to kill, and humans took that as a challenge.

      Enjoy the oxygen while it’s plentiful.

      • fearout@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        That’s a great write up, thanks. Haven’t heard about the connection between the Amazon rainforest and African diatoms, that’s fascinating.

        I thought lake Chad started to dry up mostly in the 60s. I went to read some more about that and I just can’t not mention that the original lake is apparently called Mega-Chad :)

        Anyway, in case anyone else is interested to read about ancient microorganisms fuelling Amazon’s growth, here’s a really interesting paper that describes this system in great detail.

        • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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          It’s encouraging, but we shouldn’t rely on it to fix our problems. The good thing is that there are many thousands of varieties of diatoms, each with their own odds of adapting and overcoming the situation we’ve put them in. I have confidence that the planet will survive. But whether enough of these phytoplankton will evolve in time to keep catastrophic extinction events from occurring is still very much in question. We should do everything we can as a species to protect their health.

          • FarFarAway@startrek.website
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            No, we cant rely on it to fix our problems. Hell if anything it will adapt and then get exploited later on. Humans just ruin everything…

            I wish we were better and hope that we will do a 180 and try to preserve what is left, but I wouldnt bet on it.

            As much as I’m genuinely fearful of what we are going to endure in the coming years, especially the next generation, part of me feels like we deserve what we get. All we can do is prepare the best we can, cross our fingers, and ride the ride.

            It’s pretty shitty that we’re taking everything else down with us, but it does give me hope that maybe nature will surprise us, and not all will be lost, even if it seems that way.

      • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        The only realistic way to “lose” O2 is to convert it into CO2. And even if enough CO2 were produced to extinguish humanity forever, there would still be plenty of O2 left over. So “running out” of O2 is not a serious concern.

        • Uli@sopuli.xyz
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          Yes, in the long term, the planet will be fine. But bear in mind, our entire biology is based on converting O2 into CO2.

          I mean, sure, a couple billion years ago, the global ecosystem had the opposite problem and single-celled archaea was suffocating the planet with too much O2. Those are the conditions that allowed animal life to evolve.

          So, I take your point that the planet will still have O2 long after we flood the atmosphere with the millions of tons of CO2 that used to be buried deep underground. Plankton will have a comeback even if the vast majority of animal life on the planet dies of asphyxiation first. But at that point, the argument of whether we’ve “run out” of O2 is really semantics, right? If we haven’t “run out” of it, but our supply gets low enough that virtually all of us are dead as a result, I don’t place a lot of value in making that distinction.

          • FlowVoid@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            I think you missed the point.

            Our atmosphere is 21% O2, and less than 0.05% CO2.

            If that changed by 1% to 20% O2 and 1.05% CO2, we would all die. But not for asphyxiation or lack of O2, because the slight reduction in O2 would be unnoticeable. The drastic increase in CO2, on the other hand, would be catastrophic.

    • such_fifty_bucks@lemmy.one
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      Or the 2000 dead penguins washing up on the coast of Uruguay just a few days ago. Apparently starved to death, though the cause is still being investigated.

      But yeah the phytoplankton and algae boiling to death is triggering a catastrophic change in the ocean that is going to domino in horrible ways and I feel like I don’t often see a lot of people mentioning it. It’s very scary how the collapse of aquatic ecosystems is playing out.

  • Johem@lemmy.world
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    You know what would really help? Not showing a nice happy vacation beach image with that headline. How about some dead fish, people sweating while doing manual laboue or bleached corals? For fucks sake.

    (I know NBC doesn’t read Lemmy, just frustrated)

  • Proxima@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    We already passed the tipping point when the permafrost started melting and exploding. It’s going to be an awful ride.

    • RobertOwnageJunior@lemmy.world
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      There is multiple tipping points, as counterintuitive as that sounds. Just means there are certain things that cannot be repaired once they are destroyed.

      • Butters@lemmywinks.com
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        Eventually they will repair themselves. But that will be in thousands of years after we are all long gone.

        I imagine the crocodiles will survive.

  • TheMusicalFruit@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Just a reminder that warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico and Southern Atlantic = hurricane fuel. We are lucky El Niño is causing some wind shear in the upper atmosphere to break up the storms… so far. I recommend looking it up if you’re interested. Hurricane season has the potential to be devastating this year if the El Niño cycle weakens.

    • Blastoid5000@lemmy.world
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      This is why insurance companies are dropping out of the State, and yet I’d wager a good chunk of the population deny climate change exist.

    • MrShankles@reddthat.com
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      And much of the US Southeast in general. And probably the Northeast as well. But many people in the US can evacuate inland. Countries around the Caribbean Sea… not so much

      Low-income households in the US are also disproportionately affected; cause it’s hard to evacuate your family without a car, or to rebuild your life after it’s been hurricaned away.