[✔️] December 25 , 2022 - Global Warming News Digest

Richard Pauli Richard at CredoandScreed.com
Sun Dec 25 17:54:18 EST 2022


/*December 25, 2022*/
/
//[ old info from 2016 talks of weather today -- one minute video ]/
*How Climate Change Impacts Reindeer and Other Tundra Life*
greenmanbucket
Dec 24, 2022
I spoke to Ross Brown of Environment Canada in 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcYpB84-S_c



/[ plant trees anywhere with guidance from a wild botanist and obsessive 
video blogger ]/
*Tony Santoro's Guide to Illegal Tree-Planting*
Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't
331K subscribers
670,275 views  Nov 6, 2019
Note: Ratio for decomposed woodchips for soil mix should've read 1/2, 
not 1/4. Apologies. GFY.

Counteract the Bleakness of the Modern Urban Environment of rampant 
homelessness and over-priced housing by propagating and planting trees 
in neglected urban spaces. Tony Santoro shows you how with help from the 
Department of Unauthorized Forestry. Get mulch donated by da tree 
companies nice, collect seed from suitable trees for your area, get 
donated gallon tree pots from local nurseries... The best way to learn 
this shit is by doing it. Got questions? Post em in the contents.

Enjoy this content? Consider donating to the CPBBD Propaganda Ministry @ 
www.patreon.com/crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt
or venmo "societyishell".
Send comments, hate mail, horrible nudes to crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt at 
gee male dot com
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvtqKMxZ95s



/[ some details on opinion manipulation ]/
*Climate misinformation spreads on Musk’s Twitter*
- -
Now, as Twitter’s CEO, he’s overseeing one of the world’s most popular 
social media platforms that’s rife with climate change misinformation.
And it appears to be getting worse.

Since Musk’s purchase of Twitter two months ago, some prominent climate 
deniers have returned to the platform after being banned for pushing 
misinformation about the Covid-19 pandemic. There also are signs that 
scientists have left Twitter after their posts depicting global warming 
research were swarmed by critics.
Among the changes potentially driven by Musk’s effort to tear down 
barriers that once prohibited figures like former President Donald Trump 
from spreading election lies are a rise in the popularity of tweets that 
claim climate change is a scam. Some recent posts have earned 40,000 likes.

Marc Morano, who runs a blog that routinely attacks climate science, 
said that since Musk bought Twitter the appearance of his name in 
climate search results “appear to be juiced by the new algorithms.”

“My Twitter account and many others opposing the ‘consensus’ climate 
view have all increased visibility dramatically since Musk took over 
Twitter,” he said in an interview. “Whatever Musk is altering, I hope he 
keeps it up.”

Indeed, the number of tweets rejecting climate science have never been 
higher than in 2022, according to research by the University of London 
conducted on behalf of The Times newspaper. There have been more than 
850,000 climate denial tweets or retweets so far this year. There were 
650,000 such messages in 2021 and 220,000 in 2020, the analysis found.

Musk has said he will sell the blue check marks that Twitter uses to 
verify account holders to anyone who pays $8 a month. Users who pay the 
fee will see their posts “rocket to the top of replies, mentions and 
search,” according to Twitter. That could also mean that scientists who 
refuse to pay the monthly fee could see their posts lose visibility.

Climate misinformation has long been present on Twitter. But the 
proposed blue check mark policy could make the social media platform a 
larger clearinghouse for climate denialism, experts say.

Tweets that misinform the public about climate change can increase 
interactions on Twitter by generating controversy, said Michelle 
Amazeen, director of the Communication Research Center at Boston 
University and an expert on climate disinformation and social media.

“Twitter wasn’t designed to provide accurate info. Twitter is designed 
to maximize people’s attention and engagement. And how do you do that? 
You surface sensational, emotionally evocative content rather than 
surface deliberative rational information,” she said. “That’s not sexy, 
it’s all about the architecture.”

Earlier this week, a search for “climate” on Twitter resulted in 
“#ClimateScam” as the top term on the platform. Tweets using that 
hashtag were a miasma of climate disinformation, cherry-picked 
statistics and conspiracy theories. On another day, the top result was 
“climate lockdown,” a reference to the Great Reset conspiracy theory 
that claims a group of global elites is planning to shut down economic 
activity around the world to cut carbon emissions (Climatewire, Dec. 6).

Twitter appears to now boost the accounts of serial climate 
misinformers, including Steve Milloy, a former Trump EPA transition 
official; Patrick Moore, former head of the CO2 Coalition; and Morano, 
who runs a climate denial blog. In recent Twitter searches, their 
accounts appeared in top results with climate scientists, media outlets 
and NOAA.

Milloy and Moore did not respond to requests for comment.

Some prominent Twitter users who convey climate misinformation and were 
banned from the platform for other reasons have returned under Musk’s 
ownership. Tony Heller, who was removed for spreading Covid-19 
misinformation, has recently tweeted inaccuracies about global warming. 
More prominently, the Canadian author Jordan Peterson, who was removed 
for tweeting transphobic messages, was allowed back on Twitter under 
Musk and now frequently pushes climate disinformation to his 3.5 million 
followers. He recently retweeted Heller using the term #climatescam.

“Delusional green policies kill. Literally. Now,” Peterson wrote recently.

‘Radically different’
Prominent climate scientists say they are experiencing an increase of 
“climate denier bots” — which they identify as having a Twitter handle 
followed by a name and a bunch of numbers — that respond to their posts. 
It seems to be an effort to disrupt online climate discourse, said 
climate scientist Michael Mann, director of the Penn Center for Science, 
Sustainability and the Media at the University of Pennsylvania.

“Twitter was a primary medium for dissemination of the facts surrounding 
the climate crisis,” Mann said in an email. “By infecting the online 
discourse w/ massive troll and bot armies, it becomes very difficult to 
communicate these facts, which is precisely what polluters and 
petro-state bad actors like Russia and Saudi Arabia want.”

Katharine Hayhoe, a climatologist and chief scientist at the Nature 
Conservancy, also experienced a swarm of bots in recent weeks. She has 
been testing tweets and running experiments to check engagement and 
found a dramatic increase in troll and bot activity on climate tweets, 
she said. A few days ago, she received 3,000 replies from critics — or 
trolls — in one 24-hour period.

“I’m not totally sure what is happening, but there is something 
radically different going on the last month that has increased troll and 
bot activity on climate tweets by 15-30x according to my data,” Hayhoe 
tweeted recently.

She also created a master list of hundreds of climate scientists on 
Twitter. Its membership has shrunk by about 4 percent since the Musk 
takeover, she noted.

Even though Musk runs a company that has created the exact type of clean 
energy jobs that Biden wants to increase under the Inflation Reduction 
Act, he has elevated voices that routinely attack renewable energy and 
climate science. Some also attack the electric vehicle tax credits and 
grants that have been a key to Tesla’s growth.

In recent weeks, Musk’s team has provided internal company 
communications, or “Twitter Files,” to a select group of opinion 
writers. The communications show that Twitter officials discussed how to 
handle tweets related to Hunter Biden ahead of the 2020 election. One of 
the writers who received the documents was Michael Shellenberger, who 
has promoted increased fossil fuel consumption and attacked clean energy 
and climate science in congressional hearings as a Republican-invited 
witness.

In a recent hearing, Shellenberger said an expansion of electric 
vehicles “risks undermining American industries and helping China.”

*‘Climate is a scam’*
A few weeks after Musk bought Twitter on Oct. 27 for $44 billion, the 
company eliminated a policy that cracked down on Covid-19 
misinformation. Some scientists, including Mann, said the policy also 
limited inaccurate climate narratives.

“That was a clear message that it’s open season on twitter for the 
promotion of anti-science, and clearly we’ve seen an escalation in 
climate denial rhetoric,” Mann said of the policy’s withdrawal.

Scientists concluded decades ago that humans are warming the planet at 
an unprecedented pace through the burning of fossil fuels. A movement to 
dilute those findings has been funded in part by energy companies and 
linked to conservative politics in the U.S. and other countries. Twitter 
is a key platform for spreading that type of false information.

In April, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its 
sixth assessment report and found that effective communication of 
climate science has been significantly damaged by the spread of false 
claims on social media.

“Accurate transference of the climate science has been undermined 
significantly by climate change countermovements, in both legacy and 
new/social media environments through misinformation,” the report stated.

That same month, Twitter banned paid ads that promote climate denial.

“We believe that climate denialism shouldn’t be monetized on Twitter, 
and that misrepresentative ads shouldn’t detract from important 
conversations about the climate crisis,” company officials wrote in a 
blog post.

It’s unclear if that policy is still in place. Musk has fired more than 
half of the company’s employees, including its communications 
department. The two authors of the blog no longer work for the company.

Musk could not be reached for comment.

Since July, months before Musk bought Twitter, there was an uptick in 
content referring to “#ClimateScam,” “climate scam,” or “climate is a 
scam,” totaling more than 500,000 mentions, according to a report 
released last month by Climate Action Against Disinformation, an 
international coalition of environmental groups. The messages originated 
from about 150,000 accounts and spiked around the time that global 
climate talks began in Egypt last month, the report found.

Researchers found one account, @climate_fact, that was responsible for 
more than 50,000 tweets. Every few minutes, it retweeted posts that use 
“#climatescam,” “#greatreset” and other phrases. It’s unclear who runs 
the account or where they are located
https://www.eenews.net/articles/climate-misinformation-spreads-on-musks-twitter/



/[ check the weather and suspect the climate changes ]/
*WMO releases ‘tell-tale signs’ of extreme weather conditions around the 
world*
23 December 2022
 From extreme floods to heat and drought, weather and climate-related 
disasters have affected millions and cost billions this year, the World 
Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Friday, describing the 
“tell-tale signs and impacts” of intensified climate change.

The clear need to do much more to cut greenhouse gas emissions was again 
underscored throughout events in 2022, said the UN weather agency, 
advocating for strengthened climate change adaptation, including 
universal access to early warnings.

“This year we have faced several dramatic weather disasters which 
claimed far too many lives and livelihoods and undermined health, food, 
energy and water security and infrastructure”, said WMO chief Petteri 
Taalas...

*On warmest track*
While Global temperature figures for 2022 will be released in 
mid-January, the past eight years are on track to be the eight warmest 
on record, according to WMO.

While the persistence of a cooling La Niña event, now in its third year, 
means that 2022 will not be the warmest year on record, its cooling 
impact will be short-lived and not reverse the long-term warming trend 
caused by record levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in our atmosphere.

Moreover, this will be the tenth successive year that temperatures have 
reached at least 1°C above pre-industrial levels – likely to breach the 
1.5°C limit of the Paris Agreement.

*Early warnings*
Early warnings, increasing investment in the basic global observing 
system and building resilience to extreme weather and climate will be 
among WMO priorities in 2023 – the year that the WMO community 
celebrates its 150th anniversary.

“There is a need to enhance preparedness for such extreme events and to 
ensure that we meet the UN target of Early Warnings for All in the next 
five years”, said the top WMO official.

WMO will also promote a new way of monitoring the sinks and sources of 
carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide by using the ground-based 
Global Atmosphere Watch, satellite and assimilation modelling, which 
allows better understanding of how key greenhouse gases behave in the 
atmosphere.
*
**Climate Indicators*
Greenhouse gases are just one climate indicator used to observe levels.

Sea levels, which have doubled since 1993; ocean heat content; and 
acidification are also at recorded highs.

The past two and a half years alone account for 10 per cent of overall 
sea level rise since satellite measurements started nearly 30 years ago, 
said WMO’s provisional State of the Global Climate in 2022 report.

And 2022 took an exceptionally heavy toll on glaciers in the European 
Alps, with initial indications of record-shattering melt.

The Greenland ice sheet lost mass for the 26th consecutive year and it 
rained –rather than snowed – on the summit for the first time in September.

*National heat tolls*
Although 2022 did not break global temperature records, it topped many 
national heat records throughout the world.

India and Pakistan experienced soaring heat in March and April. China 
had the most extensive and long-lasting heatwave since national records 
began and the second-driest summer on record.

And parts of the northern hemisphere were exceptionally hot and dry.

A large area centred around the central-northern part of Argentina, as 
well as in southern Bolivia, central Chile, and most of Paraguay and 
Uruguay, experienced record-breaking temperatures during two consecutive 
heatwaves in late November and early December 2022.

“Record breaking heatwaves have been observed in China, Europe, North 
and South America”, the WMO chief added. “The long-lasting drought in 
the Horn of Africa threatens a humanitarian catastrophe

And while large parts of Europe sweltered in repeated episodes of 
extreme heat, the United Kingdom hit a new national record in July, when 
the temperature topped more than 40°C for the very first time.
*
**Record breaking rain*
In East Africa, rainfall has been below average throughout four 
consecutive wet seasons – the longest in 40 years – triggering a major 
humanitarian crisis affecting millions of people, devastating 
agriculture, and killing livestock, especially in Ethiopia, Kenya and 
Somalia.

Record breaking rain in July and August led to extensive flooding in 
Pakistan, which caused at least 1,700 deaths, displaced 7.9 million and 
affected 33 million people.

“One third of Pakistan was flooded, with major economic losses and human 
casualties”, reminded Mr. Taalas.
https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/12/1131992



/[  Manipulating information --  ] /
*The right-wing groups behind renewable energy misinformation*
A conversation with journalist Michael Thomas.
David Roberts
Dec 23

It's easy to find stories in the media these days about communities 
blocking solar, wind, and other clean energy projects. This has prompted 
an enormous amount of discourse about NIMBYs and the challenges of 
permitting projects. What's often left out of the discourse — and almost 
always left out of those stories — is how such community groups receive 
organizational help and money from billionaire-funded right-wingers.

Across the country and the internet, there are hundreds of conservative 
think tanks, groups, and individuals working to stir up community 
opposition to renewable energy with misinformation and lies. With 
virtually no public scrutiny, they have secured state-level policies 
restricting renewable energy siting in dozens of states.

Michael Thomas
Independent journalist Michael Thomas set about to learn more about 
these right-wing groups. He joined anti-renewable-energy Facebook 
groups, combed through the tax filings of various right-wing think 
tanks, and tried to trace funding sources. He published the results in 
his own newsletter, Distilled.

I'm excited to talk to him about what he found: the groups involved, the 
tactics they use, the policies they've helped pass, and the best way to 
fight back.

You're currently a free subscriber to Volts. For the full experience, 
upgrade your subscription.

https://www.volts.wtf/p/the-right-wing-groups-behind-renewable?utm_source=podcast-email%2Csubstack&publication_id=193024&post_id=91559751&utm_medium=email#details

- -


/[ More about misinformation ]/
*'I Agree' - the biggest lie on the internet? | All Hail The Algorithm*
Al Jazeera English
95,250 views  Jul 31, 2019  #Aljazeeraenglish #Algorithms 
#AllHailTheAlgorithm
‘Read Me’ Or Just Tap ‘I Agree’
There’s a huge group of people at work behind our screens. They’re 
called behaviour architects, persuasive designers or user-experience 
specialists and the power they have is massive.

That urge to keep swiping through your twitter feed? That’s design.
The way we all click ‘I Agree’ to the terms and conditions? That’s design.
Swiping right or left on Tinder? Well, that’s design too.

We live in an online world of someone else’s making and most of us never 
even give it a second thought. And actually, that’s design as well.

Join Ali Rae in this episode of ‘All Hail The Algorithm’ - a 5 part 
series exploring the impact of these invisible codes on our everyday lives.

In this episode Ali speaks with Woody Hartzog, author of ‘Privacy’s 
Blueprint: The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies; Aza 
Raskin, creator of infinite-scroll and co-founder of The Center for 
Humane Technology; Natasha Dow Schüll, cultural anthropologist and 
author of ‘Addiction by Design’.

Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrZQs25hA18



/[The news archive - looking back at similarities... wait is this 
happening again? weaponizing oil markets ]/
/*December 25, 2014*/
December 25, 2014: The New York Times reports:

    *Oil’s Swift Fall Raises Fortunes of U.S. Abroad*

    By Andrew Higgins
    Dec. 24, 2014

    BRUSSELS — A plunge in oil prices has sent tremors through the
    global political and economic order, setting off an abrupt shift in
    fortunes that has bolstered the interests of the United States and
    pushed several big oil-exporting nations — particularly those
    hostile to the West, like Russia, Iran and Venezuela — to the brink
    of financial crisis.

    The nearly 50 percent decline in oil prices since June has had the
    most conspicuous impact on the Russian economy and President
    Vladimir V. Putin. The former finance minister Aleksei L. Kudrin, a
    longtime friend of Mr. Putin’s, warned this week of a “full-blown
    economic crisis” and called for better relations with Europe and the
    United States.

    But the ripple effects are spreading much more broadly than that.
    The price plunge may also influence Iran’s deliberations over
    whether to agree to a deal on its nuclear program with the West;
    force the oil-rich nations of the Middle East to reassess their role
    in managing global supply; and give a boost to the economies of the
    biggest oil-consuming nations, notably the United States and China.

    It might even have been a late factor in Cuba’s decision to seal a
    rapprochement with Washington.

    After a precipitous drop, to less than $60 a barrel from around $115
    a barrel in June, oil prices settled at a low level this week. Their
    fall, even if partly reversed, was so sharp and so quick as to
    unsettle plans and assumptions in many governments. That includes
    Mr. Putin’s apparent hope that Russia could weather Western
    sanctions over its intervention in Ukraine without serious economic
    harm, and Venezuela’s aspirations for continuing the free-spending
    policies of former President Hugo Chávez.

    The price drop, said Edward N. Luttwak, a longtime Pentagon adviser
    and author of several books on geopolitical and economic strategy,
    “is knocking down America’s principal opponents without us even
    trying.” For Iran, which is estimated to be losing $1 billion a
    month because of the fall, it is as if Congress had passed the much
    tougher sanctions that the White House lobbied against, he said.

    Iran has been hit so hard that its government, looking for ways to
    fill a widening hole in its budget, is offering young men the option
    of buying their way out of an obligatory two years of military
    service. “We are on the eve of a major crisis,” an Iranian
    economist, Hossein Raghfar, told the Etemaad newspaper on Sunday.
    “The government needs money badly.”

    Venezuela, which has the world’s largest estimated oil reserves and
    has used them to position itself as a foil to American
    “imperialism,” received 95 percent of its export earnings from
    petroleum before prices fell. It is now having trouble paying for
    social projects at home and for a foreign policy rooted in
    oil-financed largess, including shipments of reduced-price petroleum
    to Cuba and elsewhere.

    Amid worries on bond markets that Venezuela might default on its
    loans, President Nicolás Maduro, who was elected last year after the
    death of Mr. Chávez, has said the country will continue to pay its
    debts. But inflation in Venezuela is over 60 percent, there are
    shortages of many basic goods, and many experts believe the economy
    is in recession.

    But the biggest casualty so far has probably been Russia, where
    energy revenue accounts for more than half of the government’s
    budget. Mr. Putin built up strong support by seeming to banish the
    economic turmoil that had afflicted the rule of his predecessor,
    Boris N. Yeltsin. Yet Russia was back on its heels last week, with
    the ruble going into such a steep dive that panicked Russians
    thronged shops to spend what they had.

    “We’ve seen this movie before,” said Strobe Talbott, who was
    President Bill Clinton’s senior Russia adviser in the aftermath of
    the Soviet Union’s 1991 collapse and is now president of the
    Brookings Institution in Washington.

    Russia’s troubles have rippled around the world, slashing bookings
    at ski resorts in Austria and spending on London real estate;
    spreading panic in neighboring Belarus, a close Russian ally; and
    even threatening to upend Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, which
    pays players in rubles.

    “It is a big boost for the U.S. when three out of four of our active
    antagonists are seriously weakened, when their room for maneuver is
    seriously reduced,” Mr. Luttwak said, referring to Russia, Iran and
    Venezuela.

    The only major United States antagonist not hurt by the drop in oil
    prices is North Korea, which imports all of its petroleum.

    David L. Goldwyn, who was the State Department’s international
    energy coordinator during President Obama’s first term, warned that
    an implosion of Venezuela’s economy could hurt the Caribbean and
    Latin America in ways that the United States would not welcome.

    But “on balance, it’s positive for the U.S.,” he said of the low
    price of oil, because American consumers save money, and “it harms
    Russia and puts pressure on Iran.”

    Even some of the indirect consequences of the price slump, like last
    week’s break in the half-century diplomatic logjam between
    Washington and Havana, have generally worked in the United States’
    favor. Fearful that Venezuela, its main benefactor, might cut off
    supplies of cash and cheap oil, Cuba sealed a historic deal that has
    in turn lifted a shadow over the United States’ standing in much of
    Latin America.

    Another casualty of the price collapse has been Belarus, a former
    Soviet territory long reviled by American officials as Europe’s last
    dictatorship. It produces no significant amount of crude oil itself
    but has nonetheless taken a big hit. This is because its economy
    depends heavily on the export of petroleum products that Belarus
    produces using crude oil supplied, at a steep discount, by Russia.

    Marwan Muasher, a former foreign minister of Jordan who is now a
    vice president at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
    predicted another domino effect in Syria as Russia and Iran find it
    difficult to sustain their economic, military and diplomatic support
    for President Bashar al-Assad.

    Others speculate that Persian Gulf oil producers, though still
    wealthy, might trim their financial support for radical Islamist
    rebel groups in Syria.

    Mr. Muasher said the drop in oil prices could also prod Middle East
    oil producers toward political and economic change by challenging
    so-called rentier systems in which governments derive much of their
    income from rents paid by foreigners for resources. “Whatever the
    case, it is clear that the effect of the new oil price levels will
    not be limited to the economic sphere,” he wrote in a Carnegie report.

    Hard-hit anti-American oil producers have blamed foreign
    machinations for their woes, suggesting that Washington, in cahoots
    with Saudi Arabia, has deliberately driven down prices.

    This view is particularly strong in Russia, where former K.G.B.
    agents close to Mr. Putin have long believed that Washington
    engineered the collapse of the Soviet Union by getting Saudi Arabia
    to increase oil output, driving down prices and thus starving Moscow
    of revenue.

    In many ways, the recent price fall really is the United States’
    work, flowing to a large extent from a surge in American oil
    production through the development of alternative sources like shale.

    By offsetting declines in conventional oil production, increases in
    shale oil output have allowed overall American crude oil production
    to rise to an average of about nine million barrels a day from five
    million a day in 2008, according to the United States Energy
    Information Administration. That four-million-barrel increase is
    more than either Iraq or Iran, the second- and third-largest OPEC
    producers after Saudi Arabia, produces each day, and it has put
    strong downward pressure on world prices.

    The geopolitical shakeout set off by the oil market has not gone
    entirely America’s way. Russia’s troubles have so far shown no sign
    of pushing Mr. Putin toward a more conciliatory position on Ukraine,
    and some analysts believe they could make Moscow even more
    pugnacious and prone to lashing out.

    The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee, which monitors
    possible systemic threats, warned in minutes released this week that
    “sustained lower oil price also had the potential to reinforce
    certain geopolitical risks.” It voiced alarm, too, over an increased
    risk of deflation in the eurozone, the 18-nation area that uses
    Europe’s common currency.

    The price drop could also encourage more freewheeling use of oil
    products like gasoline, undermining what appears to be a growing
    consensus among nations that carbon emissions must be reeled in to
    offset the most dire effects of global warming.

    While authoritarian oil producers like Russia are clearly suffering,
    China is enjoying a huge windfall thanks to the price drop. It
    imports nearly 60 percent of the oil it needs to power its economy.

    China became the world’s largest importer of oil in 2013, surpassing
    the United States, and so stands to benefit from plummeting prices.
    Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimated last month that every 10
    percent decline in the price of oil could increase China’s economic
    growth by 0.15 percent.

    Strong growth in China would lift demand for oil and help reduce the
    current agonies of OPEC, which pumps around a third of the world’s
    oil but, largely as a result of increased American production, has
    lost much of its ability to dictate prices by controlling output.

    In an interview with the Middle East Economic Survey this week, the
    Saudi energy minister, Ali al-Naimi, indicated a fundamental
    rethinking by OPEC, saying that it needed to focus on keeping its
    market share rather than trying to raise prices by slashing
    production. “We have entered a scary time for the oil market,” he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/25/world/europe/oils-swift-fall-raises-fortunes-of-us-abroad.html


=======================================
*Mass media is lacking, many daily summariesdeliver global warming news 
- a few are email delivered*

=========================================================
**Inside Climate News*
Newsletters
We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every day or 
once a week, our original stories and digest of the web’s top headlines 
deliver the full story, for free.
https://insideclimatenews.org/
---------------------------------------
**Climate Nexus* https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*
Delivered straight to your inbox every morning, Hot News summarizes the 
most important climate and energy news of the day, delivering an 
unmatched aggregation of timely, relevant reporting. It also provides 
original reporting and commentary on climate denial and pro-polluter 
activity that would otherwise remain largely unexposed.    5 weekday
=================================
*Carbon Brief Daily https://www.carbonbrief.org/newsletter-sign-up*
Every weekday morning, in time for your morning coffee, Carbon Brief 
sends out a free email known as the “Daily Briefing” to thousands of 
subscribers around the world. The email is a digest of the past 24 hours 
of media coverage related to climate change and energy, as well as our 
pick of the key studies published in the peer-reviewed journals.
more at https://www.getrevue.co/publisher/carbon-brief
==================================
*T*he Daily Climate *Subscribe https://ehsciences.activehosted.com/f/61*
Get The Daily Climate in your inbox - FREE! Top news on climate impacts, 
solutions, politics, drivers. Delivered week days. Better than coffee.
Other newsletters  at https://www.dailyclimate.org/originals/

/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------/ 

/Archive of Daily Global Warming News 
https://pairlist10.pair.net/pipermail/theclimate.vote/


/To receive daily mailings - click to Subscribe 
<mailto:subscribe at theClimate.Vote?subject=Click%20SEND%20to%20process%20your%20request> 
to news digest./

Privacy and Security:*This mailing is text-only.  It does not carry 
images or attachments which may originate from remote servers.  A 
text-only message can provide greater privacy to the receiver and 
sender. This is a personal hobby production curated by Richard Pauli
By regulation, the .VOTE top-level domain cannot be used for commercial 
purposes. Messages have no tracking software.
To subscribe, email: contact at theclimate.vote 
<mailto:contact at theclimate.vote> with subject subscribe, To Unsubscribe, 
subject: unsubscribe
Also you may subscribe/unsubscribe at 
https://pairlist10.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/theclimate.vote
Links and headlines assembled and curated by Richard Pauli for 
http://TheClimate.Vote <http://TheClimate.Vote/> delivering succinct 
information for citizens and responsible governments of all levels. List 
membership is confidential and records are scrupulously restricted to 
this mailing list.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist10.pair.net/pipermail/theclimate.vote/attachments/20221225/b559f160/attachment.htm>


More information about the theClimate.Vote mailing list