<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
</head>
<body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<font size="+2"><font face="Calibri"><i><b>April</b></i></font></font><font
size="+2" face="Calibri"><i><b> 22, 2023</b></i></font><font
face="Calibri"><br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"> </font> <br>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ BBC reports ] </i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> </font> <font face="Calibri"><b>Earth Day:
How to talk to your parents about climate change</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">By Georgina Rannard</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">BBC Climate and Science Reporter</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">You want to go vegan to help the planet, but
you're not paying for the shopping. You think trains are better
than planes, but your dad books the summer holiday.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Young people are some of the world's most
powerful climate leaders and want rapid action to tackle the
problem.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Big changes are difficult, especially when they
involve other people. Where do you begin? For this year's Earth
Day, we spoke to people who have successfully had tricky climate
chats at home. Here are their top tips:</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>How to talk about going meat-free</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Eating less meat is one of the best ways to
reduce our impact on the planet, say scientists.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Ilse, 17, lives in Brighton with her parents
Antonia and Sally. They used to eat meat two or even three times a
day. When Ilse was 13 she decided to do more about climate change
and read that cutting out meat was a good start.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Sally and Antonia were sceptical at first,
worried about not getting enough protein or that Ilse was too
young to make that decision.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Antonia said her daughter's commitment to going
meat-free persuaded the family it was worth trying</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">"I was thinking, you're not doing the cooking.
It's a big hassle for us," says Antonia, saying she worried about
how to cook "nice" Chinese vegetarian meals. After a
one-day-a-week trial, they quickly scaled up and after a year were
totally meat-free.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">"It was daunting at the beginning, but now it's
really good. There's a million recipes out there," Antonia adds.
Ilse jumps in to say her favourite now is vegetarian fajitas, and
they cook a lot of roast vegetables or lasagne.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Sally says that seeing the emotional impact of
the topic on her daughter helped to persuade her it was the right
thing for her family. "It's actually seeing her really stick to
that commitment, even though we knew that she liked the taste of
meat. That made me stop and think," she explains.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Ilse is part of Teach the Parent, a national
campaign that encourages these conversations between generations.
It was started by young people frustrated with the lack of
international climate action and their feelings of powerlessness,
says Melanie Kee from Students Organising for Sustainability UK
who helps to run the project.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Even if the first conversation goes badly, Ilse
says keep going. "Big lifestyle changes take time. If you bring it
up every so often, it shapes people's attitudes in the long term."</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>How to talk about flying less</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">How we travel is a major source of carbon
emissions, but switching from driving or flying can potentially
limit family holidays and cost more.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Phoebe L Hanson, a 21-year-old student from
Stafford, persuaded her family to go to Cornwall instead of flying
abroad. Facts are important but she advises focussing on the
reasons why you care.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">"Say something like, 'I'm really scared about
my future, these are the reasons I want to do something'," she
suggests. Her mum Tracy explains that as Phoebe got older, their
relationship changed from Tracy explaining facts to her to meeting
in the middle to share knowledge.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Present a solution, not just a problem, Phoebe
explains. "Give them options for something fun or exciting."</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">"Saying 'let's do this thing instead' is really
good way to communicate," she suggests.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">She also says one answer to concerns about
money is to discuss what type of world parents want children to
inherit. "People talk about how expensive trains are, but think
about what the carbon emissions from taking a plane mean in the
long term for us," she says.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>How to talk about being waste-free</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Radically reducing what we buy and throw away
can improve our carbon footprint, but it can be time-consuming and
difficult.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Becky Little, who is 20 and a community carer
in Worcester, persuaded her parents Rob and Ellen to reduce food
waste and think more carefully about what they buy.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Be well-informed about the things you want your
family to start changing so they can see you care and have done
some research," she says.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Her parents were concerned about convenience
but she focussed on the positive impacts. "Explain why it will
make their lives easier or cheaper," she suggests.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">"Make connections with things they care about,"
she advises. Her family like to volunteer so they made meals using
leftover food to donate to people in their local community.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">"It's important to not go into it expecting
them to change their whole lives. Small things can make a
difference," she explains.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Ilse, Phoebe and Becky all say that the
conversations can be challenging at times but worth it. "Taking
action as an individual mean I've managed to feel a lot more in
control of my future," Phoebe explains.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-65339214">https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-65339214</a></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"></font>
<p><font face="Calibri">- -</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ nice little video - from BBC IDEAS ]</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><b>How to talk with children about
climate change</b><br>
Climate change can feel overwhelming, particularly for children.
What’s the best way to talk about the issue?<br>
Animated by Flock, 13 April 2023<br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/ideas/videos/how-to-talk-with-children-about-climate-change/p0fgdjtz">https://www.bbc.co.uk/ideas/videos/how-to-talk-with-children-about-climate-change/p0fgdjtz</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ Asia heating up - DW video news 13 min ]</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><b>Heatwaves ravage Asia, climate
protesters disrupt Berlin | DW News</b><br>
DW News<br>
Apr 21, 2023 #weather #asia #heatwaves<br>
The World Metereological Organisation says the last eight years
have been the hottest on record. Asia has been hit especially hard
by rising temperatures. Climate change is also linked to other
extreme weather events, such as the flooding that devastated
Pakistan earlier this year. Critics say governments are not doing
enough to tackle global warming. <br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA52toutUNs">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA52toutUNs</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<br>
<font face="Calibri"> <i>[ From Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
]</i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>Faster than forecast, climate impacts
trigger tipping points in the Earth system</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">By David Spratt | April 19, 2023</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">“Could anthropogenic climate change result in
worldwide societal collapse or even eventual human extinction? At
present, this is a dangerously underexplored topic … yet there are
ample reasons to suspect that climate change could result in a
global catastrophe,” wrote the eminent Australian climate
scientist Will Steffen and his colleagues in August 2022 in
“Climate Endgame: Exploring catastrophic climate change
scenarios.”<br>
<br>
Steffen, who died earlier this year, will be remembered for some
of the big, crucial ideas he contributed to the understanding of
the Earth system, particularly planetary boundaries, tipping point
vulnerabilities and cascades, risk and nonlinearity, and the
“hothouse Earth” scenario—ideas developed with Tim Lenton, Johan
Rockström, Katherine Richardson, Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, and
others.<br>
<br>
In their 2018 “hothouse” paper, Steffen and his colleagues
explored the potential for self-reinforcing feedbacks to push the
Earth System toward a planetary threshold that, if crossed, “could
prevent stabilization of the climate at intermediate temperature
rises and cause continued warming on a ‘Hothouse Earth’ pathway
even as human emissions are reduced.”<br>
<br>
This challenged the notion that climate warming was a predictable,
linear consequence of increasing levels of greenhouse gases, and
instead pointed to critical thresholds, or tipping points, in
which a small change causes a larger, more critical change to be
initiated, taking the climate system as a whole or particular
systems within it from one state to a discretely different state.
The loss of polar glaciers, or the Amazon rainforest drying and
being replaced by sclerophyll forest, are examples...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">The change may be abrupt or
non-linear—characterized by sudden change rather than smooth
progress—and irreversible on relevant time frames.<br>
<br>
It may also lead to cascading events in which the mutual
interaction of individual climate tipping points and/or abrupt
changes lead to more profound changes to the entire system. This
is already happening. The loss of sea ice in the Arctic is adding
to regional warming, accelerating ice melt from Greenland, such
that an influx of cold, non-salty water into the North Atlantic is
slowing the Gulf Stream, which in turn is changing the Amazon
climate.<br>
<br>
Recent research has confirmed that tipping points and cascades are
already occurring, not at 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius of warming, but
right now. In one of his last published pieces, a 2022 book
chapter, Steffen said, “it is clear from observations of climate
change-related impacts in Australia alone—the massive bushfires of
the 2019-2020 Black Summer, the third mass bleaching of the Great
Barrier Reef in only five years, and long-term cool-season drying
of the country’s southeast agricultural zone—that even a 1.1°C
temperature rise has put us into a dangerous level of climate
change.”<br>
<br>
While observed warming has been close to climate model
projections, the impacts have in many instances been faster and
even more extreme than the models forecasted. William Ripple and
his co-researchers show that many positive feedbacks are not fully
accounted for in climate models.<br>
<br>
And prominent climate scientist Michael Mann says that when it
comes to certain important consequences of warming, including ice
sheet collapse, sea level rise, and the rise in extreme weather
events, “the [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)]
reports in my view have been overly conservative, in substantial
part because of processes that are imperfectly represented in the
models.”<br>
<br>
In September 2022, Stockholm University’s David Armstrong McKay
and his colleagues concluded that even global warming of 1-degree
Celsius risks triggering some tipping points, just one data point
in an alarming mountain of research on tipping points presented in
the last year and a half.<br>
<br>
Denman Glacier, in East Antarctic, was identified as susceptible
to collapse of its ice shelf and inundation of the glacier itself,
which sits on a retrograde base below sea level. Scientists
announced that the Thwaites Glacier ice shelf in West Antarctica
was fracturing and likely to result in a speeding up of the
glacier’s flow and ice discharge, possibly heralding the collapse
of the glacier itself and triggering similar increases across the
Amundsen Sea glaciers. “The final collapse of Thwaites Glacier’s
last remaining ice shelf may be initiated … within as little as
five years,” they said.<br>
<br>
In November 2022, the State of the Cryosphere report concluded
that more than four meters of additional sea level rise was locked
in “with sections of the West Antarctic ice sheet potentially
collapsing even without any further emissions over the coming
centuries.” An ingenious look at the genetic history of Turquet’s
octopus and its population movement across Antarctica in past warm
periods led to the conclusion that “even under global heating of
1.5°C—the most ambitious goal under the global Paris climate
agreement—the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could be consigned to
collapse.”<br>
<br>
In August, researchers showed that the Arctic has warmed nearly
four times faster than the globe since 1979 and concluded it is
likely climate models systematically tend to underestimate this
amplification. A few months later, scientists reported that
Greenland Ice Sheet glaciers are melting 100 times faster than
previously calculated. At the end of 2021, Professor Jason Box
said that the Greenland Ice Sheet has passed a tipping point:
“Technically, now [at 1.2°C] Greenland is beyond its viability
threshold… 1.5°C would mean the ‘beyond the threshold’ state is
enhanced and the loss [of ice mass] becomes a complex, non-linear,
amplified response guaranteeing the ice sheet remains beyond its
viability threshold.”<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Permafrost carbon emissions and the feedback
loops they will initiate are not accounted for in most Earth
system models or Integrated Assessment Models, including those
which informed the IPCC’s special report on global warming of 1.5
degrees Celsius, nor are they fully accounted for in global
emissions budgets. If carbon-cycle feedbacks such as tipping
points in forest ecosystems and abrupt permafrost thaw are
accounted for, the estimated remaining budget for carbon emissions
could disappear altogether.<br>
<br>
In a ground-breaking 2021 paper, Northern Arizona University’s
Katharyn Duffy and colleagues mapped the relationship between
increasing temperatures and carbon uptake in Amazon forests by
analyzing more than 20 years of data on the transfer of carbon
dioxide between plants, land, and the atmosphere; their analysis
showed that in recent hot periods the thermal maximum for
photosynthesis had been exceeded. At higher temperatures, the
amount of carbon dioxide absorbed by plants (photosynthesis) will
decline sharply, whilst carbon dioxide released by plants
(respiration) will continue to rise.<br>
<br>
In addition, recent evidence shows human fossil fuel emissions are
still rising and will not likely plateau until the end of this
decade, a far cry from the “carbon law,” which requires halving
emissions by 2030 to keep warming to under a 2-degree Celsius
trajectory. Current analysis suggests the world is heading to
around 3 degrees Celsius of warming, or perhaps 3.5 degrees
Celsius in a plausible high-end trajectory.<br>
<br>
There are fair and reasonable concerns that focusing on worst-case
scenarios will cause public despair and paralysis. But when risks
are existential, it is precisely those high-end possibilities of
system collapse, rather than the middle-of-the-road linear
probabilities, that must be the focus of concern and should spur
the world to action.<br>
<br>
Speaking in 2018, Steffen said that the dominant linear,
deterministic framework for assessing climate change is flawed,
especially at higher levels of temperature rise. Model projections
that don’t include these feedback and cascading processes “become
less useful at higher temperature levels… or, as my co-author John
Schellnhuber says, we are making a big mistake when we think we
can ‘park’ the Earth System at any given temperature rise – say
2°C – and expect it to stay there.”<br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://thebulletin.org/2023/04/faster-than-forecast-climate-impacts-trigger-tipping-points-in-the-earth-system/">https://thebulletin.org/2023/04/faster-than-forecast-climate-impacts-trigger-tipping-points-in-the-earth-system/</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"> <br>
</font> <br>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ disinformation watch -- Paltering is
lying by omission; paltering can involve failing to disclose
relevant information, but unlike lying by omission, paltering
involves the active disclosure of true but misleading
information: paltering enables the would-be deceiver to actively
influence a target's beliefs.]</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><b>The Meat Industry Is Advertising Like
Big Oil</b><br>
But they’re using public funds to do it.<br>
Cartie Werthman, a young woman with straight blonde hair, smiling
in front of an evergreen tree and aerial view of a city<br>
ByCartie Werthmanon</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Apr 18, 2023 <br>
</font><font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">The “Beefing up Sustainability” campaign paints
a different picture though. “Per the EPA, beef cattle are
responsible for only 2% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.,”
it says. However, according to Jennifer Jaquet, an NYU professor
researching the advertising and lobbying activities of
agribusiness, this low-seeming percentage is due to the United
States’s relatively high overall emissions. <br>
<br>
This technique of using statements that are technically true but
omit crucial information and therefore are misleading, is called
paltering — and it’s an old favorite of the fossil fuel industry.<br>
<br>
In fact, it’s not the only tactic the NCBA has borrowed from Big
Oil. Increasingly, as NCBA and other agribusiness trade
associations like the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) and
U.S. Farmers and Ranchers in Action try to convince the public
that animal agriculture is sustainable, they are turning to the
fossil fuel industry’s tried and true playbook for greenwashing. <br>
</font><font face="Calibri"> - -Screenshot of an ad that ran in
the New York Times on Sunday, August 8, 2021. </font><br>
<font face="Calibri">
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.desmog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Screenshot-2023-04-18-at-11.24.18-AM.png.webp">https://www.desmog.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Screenshot-2023-04-18-at-11.24.18-AM.png.webp</a></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Like fossil fuel trade associations, these
agribusiness trade associations are financing and promoting the
work of third-party academics; fomenting uncertainty and doubt in
cases where the evidence is already clear enough to act upon; and
using slick PR and ad campaigns to present the industry as part of
the solution to climate change, rather than a contributor to it.<br>
<br>
At the bottom of each of NCBA’s “Beefing Up Sustainability” ads is
a logo with “Beef Checkoff” written on it. This logo marks the
biggest difference between the fossil fuel industry’s PR machine
and that of animal agriculture: The animal agriculture industry’s
efforts to minimize their products’ climate impact are paid for
from a pot of public funds to which all beef and pork farmers and
ranchers are required to contribute. <br>
<br>
<b>The Checkoffs</b><br>
These funds, known as the Checkoffs, were set up through the 1985
Farm Bill as a way for producers to pool resources to promote
beef, pork, dairy, soybeans, and other agricultural products to
the public. The Beef Checkoff program requires every rancher to
pay $1 on each live cow sold, and the Pork Checkoff requires
producers to pay 35 cents per $100 in live pig sales. Last year,
the Beef Checkoff brought in $43.1 million dollars, while the Pork
Checkoff collected $106 million from farmers. <br>
<br>
There are 19 different Checkoffs promoting various commodities.
Although they are run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the
Checkoff programs do not directly promote their commodities.
Instead, they are required to contract with “industry-governed
organizations” — private trade associations — to promote products.
Each year, trade associations submit proposals to the Checkoffs
seeking funding for public relations campaigns and research
projects.<br>
<br>
Enter the NCBA. Even though the Beef Checkoff paid for the ads
proclaiming that “beef is tonight’s sustainable dinner option,”
NCBA created the public relations campaign. NCBA, NPPC, the U.S.
Meat Export Federation, and Dairy Management Inc. are just a
sampling of the private trade associations representing industrial
agriculture companies, like the American Petroleum Institute
represents oil and gas companies. Yet unlike API, which is funded
by dues from member companies, most of these groups’ funding comes
from contracts with the public Checkoff programs.<br>
<br>
The NCBA receives a whopping 70 percent of its funding from the
Beef Checkoff. And while all farmers, however big or small, are
required to contribute to the Checkoff, the NCBA’s ranks are
stacked with representatives from Big Ag. The Cattlemen’s Beef
Board and the Pork Board, which oversee the Beef and Pork
Checkoffs and approve the funding requests from trade associations
for promotional campaigns, are full of NCBA and NPPC members. <br>
<br>
Vaugn Meyer, a committee chairman for R-CALF USA, an association
of cattle ranchers and sheep producers, is the rare person who
served on the Cattlemen’s Beef Board without being affiliated with
NCBA. <br>
<br>
“It actually is probably close to 80, 90 [percent],” he says of
NCBA members on the Beef Board. “Once in a while, some of those
slip in on the other side. I was one of them.” <br>
<br>
For the small producers, this close relationship between the
Checkoffs and the trade associations that favor industrial
agriculture is a problem.<br>
<br>
“They [the NCBA] claim to be the voice of the cattlemen, but it’s
basically under the table owned by the [meat] packers,” Meyer told
DeSmog. <br>
<br>
Meyer is referring to the “Big 4” meatpackers — JBS, Tyson Foods,
Cargill, and Marfrig — all of which are members of NCBA. They
control 85 percent of the market but, unlike cattlemen, they don’t
pay into the Beef Checkoff. And while all cattle producers in the
United States are required to pay into the Checkoff funds, less
than 4 percent are members of NCBA. <br>
<br>
R-CALF USA has sued the USDA and the NCBA because it says the Beef
Checkoff operates unconstitutionally. It believes that NCBA uses
Checkoff funds to benefit meatpackers at the expense of small
ranches. <br>
<br>
Surbhi Sarang, a lawyer at the public interest firm Public Justice
that represents R-CALF USA, says that NCBA’s Checkoff-funded ads
allow meatpackers to pay producers less for their beef. NCBA’s ads
promote all beef as a sustainable dinner option — which makes it
hard for smaller, more environmentally friendly ranches to market
their beef as a better option. <br>
<br>
“When they are making sustainability claims, it’s applying to all
beef and they’re not differentiating between where that beef was
produced, or how it was produced, or who it was produced by,” she
says. “If the consumer has no reason to seek out anything
different, then that’s really just empowering these meatpacking
corporations to kind of, you know, increase their margins,” Sarang
said.<br>
<br>
The Checkoff programs “sell so well; they sound like great
opportunities,” Matt Penzer, a lawyer with the Humane Society who
has been working on Checkoff lawsuits for years, told DeSmog. “But
then you get into the details of how they actually run and it
turns out, these are largely private trade associations getting
free runs.” <br>
<br>
NCBA did not respond to a request for comment...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">---<br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.desmog.com/2023/04/18/meat-industry-advertising-big-oil-climate-change-ncba-nppc-checkoff/">https://www.desmog.com/2023/04/18/meat-industry-advertising-big-oil-climate-change-ncba-nppc-checkoff/</a><br>
</font>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<font face="Calibri"> <i>[The news archive - looking back]</i><br>
<font size="+2"><i><b>April 22, 1970</b></i></font> <br>
April 22, 1970: "NBC Nightly News" anchor Frank Blair, covering
the events of the first Earth Day, cites global warming as a
concern.<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.nbcnews.com/video/icue/29901277">http://www.nbcnews.com/video/icue/29901277</a><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://web.archive.org/web/20170428020604/http://www.nbcnews.com/video/icue/29901277">https://web.archive.org/web/20170428020604/http://www.nbcnews.com/video/icue/29901277</a><br>
<br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri">======================================= <br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b class="moz-txt-star"><span
class="moz-txt-tag">*Mass media is lacking, many </span>daily
summaries<span class="moz-txt-tag"> deliver global warming
news - a few are email delivered*</span></b> <br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><br>
=========================================================<br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b>*Inside Climate News</b><br>
Newsletters<br>
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.<br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://insideclimatenews.org/">https://insideclimatenews.org/</a><br>
--------------------------------------- <br>
*<b>Climate Nexus</b> <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*">https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*</a>
<br>
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 <br>
================================= <br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b class="moz-txt-star"><span
class="moz-txt-tag">*</span>Carbon Brief Daily </b><span
class="moz-txt-star"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/newsletter-sign-up">https://www.carbonbrief.org/newsletter-sign-up</a></span><b
class="moz-txt-star"><span class="moz-txt-tag">*</span></b> <br>
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. <br>
more at <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.getrevue.co/publisher/carbon-brief">https://www.getrevue.co/publisher/carbon-brief</a>
<br>
================================== <br>
*T<b>he Daily Climate </b>Subscribe <a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://ehsciences.activehosted.com/f/61*">https://ehsciences.activehosted.com/f/61*</a>
<br>
Get The Daily Climate in your inbox - FREE! Top news on climate
impacts, solutions, politics, drivers. Delivered week days.
Better than coffee. <br>
Other newsletters at <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.dailyclimate.org/originals/">https://www.dailyclimate.org/originals/</a>
<br>
<br>
</font> </p>
<font face="Calibri">
/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------/
<br>
/Archive of Daily Global Warming News <a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://pairlist10.pair.net/pipermail/theclimate.vote/">https://pairlist10.pair.net/pipermail/theclimate.vote/</a><br>
<br>
<br>
/To receive daily mailings - click to Subscribe <a
class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"
href="mailto:subscribe@theClimate.Vote?subject=Click%20SEND%20to%20process%20your%20request"><mailto:subscribe@theClimate.Vote?subject=Click%20SEND%20to%20process%20your%20request></a>
to news digest./<br>
<br>
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<br>
By regulation, the .VOTE top-level domain cannot be used for
commercial purposes. Messages have no tracking software.<br>
To subscribe, email: <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated
moz-txt-link-freetext" href="mailto:contact@theclimate.vote">contact@theclimate.vote</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E"
href="mailto:contact@theclimate.vote"><mailto:contact@theclimate.vote></a>
with subject subscribe, To Unsubscribe, subject: unsubscribe<br>
Also you may subscribe/unsubscribe at <a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://pairlist10.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/theclimate.vote">https://pairlist10.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/theclimate.vote</a><br>
Links and headlines assembled and curated by Richard Pauli for <a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://TheClimate.Vote">http://TheClimate.Vote</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="http://TheClimate.Vote/"><http://TheClimate.Vote/></a>
delivering succinct information for citizens and responsible
governments of all levels. List membership is confidential and
records are scrupulously restricted to this mailing list. <br>
</font>
</body>
</html>