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<p><font size="+2"><font face="Calibri"><i><b>November 16</b></i></font></font><font
size="+2" face="Calibri"><i><b>, 2023</b></i></font></p>
<i>[ Yale Climate Change Communication ]</i><br>
<b>International Public Opinion on Climate Change, 2023</b><br>
Nov 14, 2023<br>
By Anthony Leiserowitz, Marija Verner, Emily Goddard, Emily Wood,
Jennifer Carman, Natalia Ordaz Reynoso, Erik Thulin, Seth Rosenthal,
Jennifer Marlon and Nicole Buttermore<br>
Filed under: Beliefs & Attitudes, Behaviors & Actions,
Policy & Politics and Climate Impacts<br>
- -<br>
This report presents results from an international survey, conducted
in partnership with Data for Good at Meta and Rare’s Center for
Behavior & the Environment, that investigate public climate
change knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, policy preferences, and
behavior among Facebook users. The survey collected responses from
139,136 Facebook monthly active users (18+). Responses were
collected from 187 countries and territories worldwide, including
107 individual countries and territories and 3 geographic groups
comprising 80 additional countries and territories (for a total of
110 “areas,” which are the unit of analysis in the report).
Interview dates: August 3 – September 3, 2023.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/">https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/</a>
<p>- -</p>
<i>[ Read Executive Summary ]</i><br>
Nov 14, 2023<br>
<b>International Public Opinion on Climate Change, 2023</b><br>
By Anthony Leiserowitz, Marija Verner, Emily Goddard, Emily Wood,
Jennifer Carman, Natalia Ordaz Reynoso, Erik Thulin, Seth Rosenthal,
Jennifer Marlon and Nicole Buttermore<br>
Filed under: Beliefs & Attitudes, Behaviors & Actions,
Policy & Politics and Climate Impacts
<p><b>Executive Summary</b></p>
This report describes climate change beliefs, attitudes, policy
preferences, and behaviors among Facebook users in 110 countries,
territories, and geographic groups (hereafter referred to as
“areas”). Overall, these 110 areas represent 187 countries and
territories worldwide.1 The survey was developed by the Yale Program
on Climate Change Communication, Data for Good at Meta, and Rare’s
Center for Behavior & the Environment, and was fielded by Meta
from August 3 – September 3, 2023. Among the key findings at the
global level:<br>
<br>
<b>Climate Change Knowledge, Beliefs, and Engagement</b><br>
<br>
<b>Knowledge about climate change:</b> Respondents in Finland (89%)
and Hungary (85%) are the most likely to say they know “a lot” or “a
moderate amount” about climate change. In contrast, respondents in
Benin and Haiti (both 36%) are the most likely to say they have
“never heard of” climate change.
<p><b>Climate change is happening:</b> After being given a short
definition of climate change, respondents in El Salvador (94%),
Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Armenia, Nicaragua (all 93%), and Puerto Rico,
Mexico, and Colombia (all 92%) are the most likely to think
climate change is happening, while respondents in Haiti (64%);
Australia and the Netherlands (both 70%); and Laos and Austria
(both 71%) are the least likely.</p>
<b>Climate change is human-caused:</b> Respondents in Portugal
(61%), Spain (59%), and Finland (57%) are the most likely to think
that climate change is mostly caused by human activities, while
respondents in Haiti (18%) and Indonesia (20%) are the least likely.<br>
<b>Worry and Perceived Risks Regarding Climate Change</b><br>
<br>
<b>Worry about climate change: </b>Respondents in South Korea and
Puerto Rico (both 93%), and Costa Rica and El Salvador (both 92%)
are the most likely to say they are either “very worried” or
“somewhat worried” about climate change, while respondents from the
Netherlands (45%) and Yemen (47%) are the least likely.
<p><b>Climate change will harm future generations:</b> Respondents
in Puerto Rico (84%) and Costa Rica (83%) are the most likely to
say that climate change will harm future generations “a great
deal,” while respondents in Yemen (27%) are the least likely to
say so.</p>
<b>Climate change will be personally harmful:</b> Respondents are
the most likely to say that climate change will harm them personally
“a great deal” in El Salvador (66%) and Puerto Rico, Mexico, Panama,
Colombia, and Malawi (all 61%), and the least likely to say so in
the Czech Republic and Finland (both 5%), and the Netherlands (7%).
<p><b>Personal importance of climate change: </b>Respondents in El
Salvador (87%) and Mozambique (85%) are the most likely to say
that climate change is either “extremely” or “very” important to
them personally, while respondents in the Netherlands (19%) and
Jordan (28%) are the least likely to say so.</p>
<b>Support for Action on Climate Change</b><br>
<br>
<b>Climate change as a government priority: </b>Respondents in
Puerto Rico (92%) and El Salvador (90%) are the most likely to say
that climate change should be either a “very high” or “high”
priority for their government, while respondents in Yemen (38%) and
Turkey (45%) are the least likely to say so.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/toc/2/">https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/toc/2/</a><br>
- -<br>
<i>[ Read more ]</i><br>
<b>1. Climate Change Knowledge, Beliefs, and Engagement</b><br>
1.1 Respondents in many countries, territories, and groups say they
know at least a moderate amount about climate change.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/toc/3/">https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/international-public-opinion-on-climate-change-2023/toc/3/</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ Nations may move off printing money, instead wrangling energy ]</i><br>
<b>Helen Thompson: "The Complex History of Energy and Geopolitics" |
The Great Simplification #98</b><br>
Nate Hagens<br>
Nov 15, 2023 The Great Simplification - with Nate Hagens<br>
(Conversation recorded on October 30th, 2023) <br>
<br>
Show Summary: <br>
<blockquote>On this episode, political economist Helen Thompson and
Nate discuss how energy and geopolitics have interconnected over
the past century, building to the entangled political
relationships we see around us today. The dynamics of power on a
global scale are complex - stemming from access to energy,
financial control, military strength, credibility/trust, and much
more - yet we can understand these a bit better by learning the
history that shaped them. How have geologic provinces of energy
dense carbon created inherent hot spots on the geopolitical
playing field? How has the global monetary system and debt evolved
to strengthen the power of a select few countries and how
difficult is it to break from this system? Do our leaders have the
capability/knowledge to connect energy and geopolitical policy in
order to guide us through a future of declining energy
availability? <br>
</blockquote>
<br>
About Helen Thompson:<br>
Helen Thompson is Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge since
1994. Her current research concentrates on the political economy of
energy and the long history of the democratic, economic, and
geopolitical disruptions of the twenty-first century. She is a
regular panelist on Talking Politics and a columnist for the New
Statesman. She is a co-presenter of UnHerd's podcast, These Times
and recently published Disorder: Hard Times in the 21st Century.<br>
- -<br>
<blockquote>00:00 - Guest highlight<br>
00:24 - Guest introduction<br>
01:52 - How did Helen become interested in her work?<br>
04:37 - Overview of Helen’s new book: Disorder: Hard Times in the
21st Century<br>
07:21 - Is the political science field energy blind?<br>
10:29 - The Suez Crisis and potentiality of a future one<br>
14:38 - The importance of the Suez Canal and the Strait of Hormuz<br>
17:36 - Is there a parallel between the Abraham Accords and Iran
potentially feeling less relevant?<br>
21:26 - Could the Middle East countries’ aversion to the West
unite them in a conflict?<br>
24:06 - How is energy at the center of this conflict<br>
27:12 - What is the most hopeful outcome of the current situation?<br>
28:30 - Explanation of the complex situation in the Middle East<br>
30:40 - History of U.S. relations with the Middle East<br>
36:36 - Biden’s policy<br>
38:40 - BRICS+ available oil exports<br>
42:36 - Can the rest of the world put sanctions on the U.S.
without affecting their own economies?<br>
44:57 - Israel-Hamas situation and energy<br>
50:19 - Teaching<br>
51:00 - How energy allowed Britain and Germany to become key
powers in Europe<br>
57:47 - Could there be war in the future fighting for renewable
energy?<br>
1:01:10 - Can the Global North and West create agreements with the
countries in which important metals reside for renewable energy?<br>
1:06:09 - Is U.S. dollar-denominated debt strong enough to hold
geopolitical sway even if the petrodollar is in decline?<br>
1:12:18 - What really underpins the strength, ubiquity, and
confidence in the U.S. dollar?<br>
1:14:50 - Was the Ukraine invasion about energy or territorial?
How did Crimea fit into this strategy?<br>
1:21:46 - How did Europe become so dependent on Russian oil and
natural gas? <br>
1:30:10 - Where does the UK stand in this?<br>
1:32:41 - If Israel evicts the Palestinian populations from Gaza
and the West Bank, will Arab governments collectively respond, and
what would be the implications?<br>
1:35:14 - How much do end time prophecies around various religious
groups play into this situation?<br>
1:36:47 - Will energy insecurity push nations towards green
energy?<br>
1:40:32 - Helen’s advice for UK political leaders<br>
1:42:02 - Could the political leaders be educated on energy and
the systemic story?<br>
1:44:22 - Self education<br>
1:47:48 - Helen’s advice for listeners<br>
1:49:40 - Helen’s advice for young adults<br>
1:52:16 - Helen’s advice for graduate students<br>
1:55:36 - What Helen cares most about<br>
1:57:49 - Helen’s magic wand<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQbdNXQcT3E">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQbdNXQcT3E</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[The news archive - notorious secret
meeting VP Cheney holds secret pow wow ]</i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> <font size="+2"><i><b>November 16, 2005 </b></i></font>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> </font> November 16, 2005: The Washington
Post reports:<br>
<blockquote>"A White House document shows that executives from big
oil companies met with Vice President Cheney's energy task force
in 2001 -- something long suspected by environmentalists but
denied as recently as last week by industry officials testifying
before Congress<br>
<br>
“The document, obtained this week by The Washington Post, shows
that officials from Exxon Mobil Corp., Conoco (before its merger
with Phillips), Shell Oil Co. and BP America Inc. met in the White
House complex with the Cheney aides who were developing a national
energy policy, parts of which became law and parts of which are
still being debated."<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/15/AR2005111501842.html">http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/15/AR2005111501842.html</a><br>
<p><i><br>
</i></p>
<p><i><br>
</i></p>
<i>[ From the Onion -- less funny, more sardonic. Video comment ]</i><br>
<b>Scientist Explains How Climate Crisis Would Be Averted If Greta
Thunberg Just Tried A Little Harder</b><br>
The Onion<br>
Nov 15, 2023<br>
Is climate change reversible? Dr. Douglas Harrison, a climatologist
at the Pratt Climate Institute, believes so. But as he explains, in
order to save the planet, it’s going to take a lot more effort than
what’s currently being given by Swedish climate activist Greta
Thunberg.<br>
<br>
Subscribe to The Onion on YouTube: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://bit.ly/xzrBUA">http://bit.ly/xzrBUA</a><br>
Like The Onion on Facebook: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.fb.com/theonion">http://www.fb.com/theonion</a><br>
Follow The Onion on Twitter: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.twitter.com/theonion">http://www.twitter.com/theonion</a><br>
More Breaking News: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.theonion.com/video/">http://www.theonion.com/video/</a><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkrcxLgHn-w">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkrcxLgHn-w</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<p>
[ "Eyes up, horizon down. </p>
<p>Heat. Drought and deluge. </p>
<p>No-Thing is a secret " </p>
<p> rp 2023 ]</p>
<b>Japan’s haiku poets lost for words as climate crisis disrupts
seasons</b><br>
The rhythms of the natural world have informed countless haiku in
the centuries since Bashō wrote the Narrow Road to the Deep North.
But now things are not so clear<br>
by Justin McCurry in Tokyo<br>
13 Nov 2023<br>
Wooden tablets dotted along a path between office buildings and the
Sendaibori river in eastern Tokyo mark the start of a journey by
Japan’s most revered poet that would result in his greatest
collection of verse.<br>
<br>
The tablets showing haiku by Matsuo Bashō are steeped in the
seasonal certainties of the late 1600s. There are references to full
moons, chirping cicadas and, of course, cherry blossoms.<br>
<br>
Awareness of the seasons, and the seamless transition from one to
the next, is found in myriad aspects of Japanese life: cuisine and
traditional dress, the performing arts and, perhaps most
conspicuously of all, in haiku poetry.<br>
<br>
Almost four centuries later, Bashō’s words continue to inspire
admiration and countless amateur exponents of the 17-syllable form,
including the former EU president and published haiku poet Herman
Van Rompuy, who credits the verse with making him a more effective
politician.<br>
But they are also a reminder that haiku faces what some of its
enthusiasts fear is an existential threat: the climate crisis.<br>
<br>
The poems displayed at regular intervals along the Sendaibori
promenade are intended to evoke the cooler climes of autumn but this
year they feel off kilter even though it is late September.<br>
<br>
The walk begins outside the hut Bashō stayed in before setting off
on an odyssey that would result in his most famous work, Oku no
Hosomichi (The Narrow Road to the Deep North).<br>
The sun is beginning to dip, but the air is still heavy with
humidity. The exertions of walkers and cyclists, in T-shirts and
shorts, making their way to the crown of the bridge are written in
the sweat on their brows.<br>
<br>
One of the poems encapsulates the feeling of seasonal misalignment.<br>
<blockquote>Ishiyama no<br>
<br>
Ishi yori shiroshi<br>
<br>
Aki no kaze<br>
<br>
A whiteness whiter<br>
<br>
than the stones of Stone Mountain<br>
<br>
The wind in autumn<br>
</blockquote>
Bashō wrote those words after a visit to a hilltop temple in
Komatsu, near the Japan Sea coast, on 18 September 1689.<br>
Read contemporaneously, they would have evoked the arrival of
cooler, crisper days – a subtle shift in the seasons the master poet
would have doubtlessly welcomed on his epic travels on foot. Today,
though, they belong not just to another century, but to an age of
symmetry between culture and the seasons that is being irrevocably
blurred by the climate crisis.<br>
<b>Disrupting the ‘year-time almanac’</b><br>
Japan is no stranger to extreme weather, but summers once described
as uncomfortably muggy are now so hot that they represent a real
threat to human life, especially among Japan’s large and growing
population of older people. The country has experienced a series of
unusually strong typhoons in recent years, causing deadly floods in
low-lying areas and landslides in mountainous regions. Scientists
say global heating is resulting in warmer oceans around the
archipelago, threatening some marine species and affecting the
migratory habits of others.<br>
The rhythms of the natural world have informed countless haiku verse
in the centuries since Bashō lived and wrote. In their purist form,
each haiku must comprise three lines of five, seven and five
syllables, and include a kireji – a “cutting word” that lends the
verse contrast, and, crucially, a kigo, or seasonal reference.<br>
<br>
The climate crisis is wreaking havoc on the Saijiki – the “year-time
almanac” of thousands of seasonal words that are widely acknowledged
as acceptable for inclusion in haiku. A kigo could refer to a
particular plant or animal, the weather, seasonal festivals, the sky
and the heavens. When read at a corresponding time of the year, it
is supposed to stir emotions in the reader.<br>
<br>
“With kigo, you’re compressing three or four months into a single
word,” says David McMurray, a haiku poet who has curated the Asahi
Shimbun newspaper’s Haikuist Network column since 1995. “Take the
word mosquito … the entire summer is packed into that one word, and
it conjures up so many images.”<br>
<br>
The premature first pops of sakura buds in spring and and the
arrival of typhoons in the summer instead of the autumn are two
notable examples of seasonal dissonance.<br>
“The seasons are important to haiku because they focus on one
particular element,” adds McMurray, a professor of intercultural
studies at the International University of Kagoshima, where he
lectures on international haiku. “But typhoons arrive in the summer
now, and we’re getting mosquitoes in the autumn, even in northern
Japan.<br>
<br>
“The risk is that we will lose the central role of the four seasons
in composing haiku, and the Saijiki will essentially become a
historical document. The Saijiki is very specific in the way it
presents the words. But they no longer reflect reality.”<br>
<br>
‘You can’t really empathise with … that season and emotion’<br>
With more warmer days being recorded in Japan well beyond the end of
summer, the diversity of seasonal words is under threat, according
to Etsuya Hirose, a professional haiku poet.<br>
“Take koharubiyori, a kigo of late autumn to early winter used to
express a day of warm, mild, sunny, almost springlike weather in the
midst of harshly cold days, associated with a sense of soothing and
comfort,” Hirose told the Nikkei business newspaper. “Nowadays, more
days are warm at that time of year, so you can’t really empathise
with that kigo, that season and emotion.”<br>
<br>
As global heating accelerates the process of natural misalignment,
the haiku writer can either down tools in despair or simply adapt,
according to Toshio Kimura, a poet and director of the Haiku
International Association. Warmer, more unpredictable weather is
blurring the transition from one season to the next, but haiku has
the versatility to adapt, he believes. “The purpose of haiku is not
to praise seasons themselves, but to try to see the human essence
through nature.<br>
“Of course, several poets will lament climate change in their haiku.
However, to describe a certain climate is not the aim of haiku.”<br>
<br>
However, an understated form of environmental activism is now making
its way into haiku, according to Andrew Fitzsimons, a professor in
the department of English language and cultures at Gakushuin
University in Tokyo.<br>
<br>
“With later and shorter rainy seasons, longer summers, and warming
seas and oceans, with the effect on vegetation, on animal life, and
on the timing and duration of blossoms, for instance, there is a
sense of being out of step with the way things have been and have
been written about,” said Fitzsimons, author of Bashō: The Complete
Haiku of Matsuo Bashō.<br>
<br>
He offered this example by the poet Namiko Yamamoto:<br>
<blockquote>Spring in the mind<br>
<br>
if not actually<br>
<br>
in the air<br>
</blockquote>
Bashō didn’t know it at the time, of course, but modern-day admirers
have had to adjust their reading of his haiku as a result of climate
change. After this year’s long, record-breaking summer, discussion
among haiku poets turned to zansho, a reference to a phenomenon
that, in Bashō’s time, was a rarity – an early autumn day of
lingering summer heat.<br>
<br>
In 1689, Bashō wrote during his journey between Echigo (now Niigata
prefecture) and Kanazawa:<br>
<blockquote>Red on red on red<br>
<br>
unrelenting the sun yet<br>
<br>
the wind of autumn<br>
</blockquote>
“One of Basho’s most famous poems captures what is now a much more
common phenomenon,” Fitzsimons say<br>
“Haiku, like all poetry, deals with reality, both inner and outer,
so haiku can’t but concern itself with what it sees and what it
feels about what it sees. More than most forms of poetry, though,
haiku is particularly keyed to the everyday. Climate change, and the
effects it will have on how we go about living with its daily
consequences, will be an ever-present, pressing – and depressing –
theme.”<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/nov/14/lost-to-the-climate-crisis-japan-haiku-poets">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/nov/14/lost-to-the-climate-crisis-japan-haiku-poets</a><br>
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