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<font size="+2"><font face="Calibri"><i><b>December </b></i></font></font><font
size="+2" face="Calibri"><i><b>4, 2023</b></i></font><font
face="Calibri"><br>
</font><i><br>
[ 2 min video from COP ]</i><br>
<b>COP28 head says 'no science' to suggest phasing out fossil fuels
is only way to achieve 1.5C</b><br>
Sky News<br>
COP28 head says 'no science' to suggest phasing out fossil fuels is
only way to achieve 1.5C<br>
Sky News<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3NsXL30aFY">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3NsXL30aFY</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
<i>[ Words from the Patron Saint of climate activism ]</i><br>
<b>Al Gore slams COP28 climate summit host UAE, says its emissions
soared</b><br>
By Valerie Volcovici<br>
December 3, 2023<br>
DUBAI, Dec 3 (Reuters) - Climate advocate and former U.S. Vice
President Al Gore on Sunday slammed the UAE - host of the COP28
climate summit - saying its position as overseer of international
negotiations on global warming this year was an abuse of public
trust.<br>
<br>
The comments, made to Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of
the conference in Dubai, reflected skepticism among some delegates
that COP28 President Sultan al-Jaber, head of the UAE's national oil
company ADNOC, can be an honest broker of a climate deal.<br>
"They are abusing the public's trust by naming the CEO of one of the
largest and least responsible oil companies in the world as head of
the COP," Gore said.<br>
<br>
At a presentation at the COP's main plenary hall before the
interview, Gore unveiled data showing that the UAE's greenhouse gas
emissions rose by 7.5% in 2022 from the previous year, compared to a
1.5% percent rise in the entire world. That data came from a
coalition he co-founded called Climate TRACE, which uses artificial
intelligence and satellite data to track carbon emissions of
specific companies, Gore said...<br>
- -<br>
Asked about the first-ever appearance of Exxon Mobil CEO Darren
Woods at a COP conference, Gore said the oil giant's engagement does
not brush away its history of resistance to climate policies.<br>
"He should not be taken seriously. He's protecting his profits and
placing them in a higher priority than the survival of the human
civilization," Gore said.<br>
<br>
Exxon Mobil declined to comment.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/al-gore-slams-cop28-climate-summit-host-uae-says-its-emissions-soared-2023-12-03/">https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/al-gore-slams-cop28-climate-summit-host-uae-says-its-emissions-soared-2023-12-03/</a><br>
<p>- -<br>
</p>
<i>[ COP report from The Energy Mix ]</i><br>
<b>Renewables Pledge, Voluntary Methane Controls Lead Major
Announcements at COP28</b><br>
December 2, 2023 Reading time: 14 minutes<br>
Primary Author: Mitchell Beer<br>
More than 100 countries signed a global clean energy pledge, COP28
organizers touted an ambitious but voluntary methane reduction
promise by oil and gas companies, and fossil fuel phaseout language
faced steady opposition on the third day of United Nations climate
talks in Dubai.<br>
Hours ago, 118 countries including Canada, Australia, Barbados,
Brazil, Chile, Japan, and Nigeria signed a pledge led by the
European Union, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States to
triple global renewable energy capacity to 11,000 gigawatts and
double the annual rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030.
“The pledge was among a slew of COP28 announcements on Saturday
aimed at decarbonizing the energy sector—source of around
three-quarters of global greenhouse gas emissions—that included
expanding nuclear power, cutting methane emissions, and choking off
private finance for coal power,” Reuters reports...<br>
- -<br>
The Powering Past Coal Alliance welcomed the United States, the
Czech Republic, Cyprus, the Dominican Republic, Iceland, Kosovo, and
Norway as new members.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theenergymix.com/renewables-pledge-voluntary-methane-controls-lead-major-announcements-at-cop28/">https://www.theenergymix.com/renewables-pledge-voluntary-methane-controls-lead-major-announcements-at-cop28/</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
<i>[ Michigan shows how a politician can act - Governor speaks in 5
min video - share widely ]</i><br>
<b>Gretchen Whitmer: Remarks on New Energy Bills</b><br>
greenmanbucket<br>
Dec 3, 2023<br>
Hard to overstate how significant these bills are in the industrial
Midwest, how daunting the ignorance and obstinance of the
opposition, and also what a heavy lift for all stakeholders this
will be. <br>
But that does not mean they are unrealistic - it is because the
challenge is so huge, and the consequences so dire, that the only
realistic response is to go big.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sE3djVP37C0">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sE3djVP37C0</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ academic language but important ]</i><br>
<b>The 2023 report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate
change: the imperative for a health-centred response in a world
facing irreversible harms</b><br>
Marina Romanello, PhD <br>
Claudia di Napoli, PhD<br>
Carole Green, MPH<br>
Harry Kennard, PhD<br>
Pete Lampard, PhD<br>
Daniel Scamman, PhD<br>
et al.<br>
Published:November 14,
2023DOI:<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)01859-7">https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)01859-7</a><br>
PlumX Metrics<br>
<br>
<b>Executive Summary</b><br>
The Lancet Countdown is an international research collaboration that
independently monitors the evolving impacts of climate change on
health, and the emerging health opportunities of climate action. In
its eighth iteration, this 2023 report draws on the expertise of 114
scientists and health practitioners from 52 research institutions
and UN agencies worldwide to provide its most comprehensive
assessment yet.<br>
In 2022, the Lancet Countdown warned that people's health is at the
mercy of fossil fuels and stressed the transformative opportunity of
jointly tackling the concurrent climate change, energy,
cost-of-living, and health crises for human health and wellbeing.
This year's report finds few signs of such progress. At the current
10-year mean heating of 1·14°C above pre-industrial levels, climate
change is increasingly impacting the health and survival of people
worldwide, and projections show these risks could worsen steeply
with further inaction. However, with health matters gaining
prominence in climate change negotiations, this report highlights
new opportunities to deliver health-promoting climate change action
and a safe and thriving future for all.<br>
<br>
<b>The rising health toll of a changing climate</b><br>
In 2023, the world saw the highest global temperatures in over
100 000 years, and heat records were broken in all continents
through 2022. Adults older than 65 years and infants younger than 1
year, for whom extreme heat can be particularly life-threatening,
are now exposed to twice as many heatwave days as they would have
experienced in 1986–2005 (indicator 1.1.2). Harnessing the rapidly
advancing science of detection and attribution, new analysis shows
that over 60% of the days that reached health-threatening high
temperatures in 2020 were made more than twice as likely to occur
due to anthropogenic climate change (indicator 1.1.5); and
heat-related deaths of people older than 65 years increased by 85%
compared with 1990–2000, substantially higher than the 38% increase
that would have been expected had temperatures not changed
(indicator 1.1.5).<br>
<br>
Simultaneously, climate change is damaging the natural and human
systems on which people rely for good health. The global land area
affected by extreme drought increased from 18% in 1951–60 to 47% in
2013–22 (indicator 1.2.2), jeopardising water security, sanitation,
and food production. A higher frequency of heatwaves and droughts in
2021 was associated with 127 million more people experiencing
moderate or severe food insecurity compared with 1981–2010
(indicator 1.4), putting millions of people at risk of malnutrition
and potentially irreversible health effects. The changing climatic
conditions are also putting more populations at risk of
life-threatening infectious diseases, such as dengue, malaria,
vibriosis, and West Nile virus (indicator 1.3).<br>
<br>
Compounding these direct health impacts, the economic losses
associated with global heating increasingly harm livelihoods, limit
resilience, and restrict the funds available to tackle climate
change. Economic losses from extreme weather events increased by 23%
between 2010–14 and 2018–22, amounting to US$264 billion in 2022
alone (indicator 4.1.1), whereas heat exposure led to global
potential income losses worth $863 billion (indicators 1.1.4 and
4.1.3). Labour capacity loss resulting from heat exposure affected
low and medium Human Development Index (HDI) countries the most,
exacerbating global inequities, with potential income losses
equivalent to 6·1% and 3·8% of their gross domestic product (GDP),
respectively (indicator 4.1.3).<br>
<br>
The multiple and simultaneously rising risks of climate change are
amplifying global health inequities and threatening the very
foundations of human health. Health systems are increasingly
strained, and 27% of surveyed cities declared concerns over their
health systems being overwhelmed by the impacts of climate change
(indicator 2.1.3). Often due to scarce financial resources and low
technical and human capacity, the countries most vulnerable to
climate impacts also face the most challenges in achieving
adaptation progress, reflecting the human risks of an unjust
transition. Only 44% of low HDI countries and 54% of medium HDI
countries reported high implementation of health emergency
management capacities in 2022, compared with 85% of very high HDI
countries (indicator 2.2.5). Additionally, low and medium HDI
countries had the highest proportion of cities not intending to
undertake a climate change risk assessment in 2021 (12%; indicator
2.1.3). These inequalities are aggravated by the persistent failure
of the wealthiest countries to deliver the promised modest annual
sum of $100 billion to support climate action in those countries
defined as developing within the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change. Consequently, those countries that have historically
contributed the least to climate change are bearing the brunt of its
health impacts—both a reflection and a direct consequence of the
structural inequities that lie within the root causes of climate
change.<br>
<br>
<b>The human costs of persistent inaction</b><br>
The growing threats experienced to date are early signs and symptoms
of what a rapidly changing climate could mean for the health of the
world's populations. With 1337 tonnes of CO2 emitted each second,
each moment of delay worsens the risks to people's health and
survival.<br>
<br>
In this year's report, new projections reveal the dangers of further
delays in action, with every tracked health dimension worsening as
the climate changes. If global mean temperature continues to rise to
just under 2°C, annual heat-related deaths are projected to increase
by 370% by midcentury, assuming no substantial progress on
adaptation (indicator 1.1.5). Under such a scenario, heat-related
labour loss is projected to increase by 50% (indicator 1.1.4), and
heatwaves alone could lead to 524·9 million additional people
experiencing moderate-to-severe food insecurity by 2041–60,
aggravating the global risk of malnutrition. Life-threatening
infectious diseases are also projected to spread further, with the
length of coastline suitable for Vibrio pathogens expanding by
17–25%, and the transmission potential for dengue increasing by
36–37% by midcentury. As risks rise, so will the costs and
challenges of adaptation. These estimates provide some indication of
what the future could hold. However, poor accounting for non-linear
responses, tipping points, and cascading and synergistic
interactions could render these projections conservative,
disproportionately increasing the threat to the health of
populations worldwide.<br>
<br>
<b>A world accelerating in the wrong direction</b><br>
The health risks of a 2°C hotter world underscore the health
imperative of accelerating climate change action. With limits to
adaptation drawing closer, ambitious mitigation is paramount to keep
the magnitude of health hazards within the limits of the capacity of
health systems to adapt. Yet years of scientific warnings of the
threat to people's lives have been met with grossly insufficient
action, and policies to date have put the world on track to almost
3°C of heating.<br>
The 2022 Lancet Countdown report highlighted the opportunity to
accelerate the transition away from health-harming fossil fuels in
response to the global energy crisis. However, data this year show a
world that is often moving in the wrong direction. Energy-related
CO2 emissions increased by 0·9% to a record 36·8 Gt in 2022
(indicator 3.1.1), and still only 9·5% of global electricity comes
from modern renewables (mainly solar and wind energy), despite their
costs falling below that of fossil fuels. Concerningly, driven
partly by record profits, oil and gas companies are further reducing
their compliance with the Paris Agreement: the strategies of the
world's 20 largest oil and gas companies as of early 2023 will
result in emissions surpassing levels consistent with the Paris
Agreement goals by 173% in 2040—an increase of 61% from 2022
(indicator 4.2.6). Rather than pursuing accelerated development of
renewable energy, fossil fuel companies allocated only 4% of their
capital investment to renewables in 2022.<br>
<br>
Meanwhile, global fossil fuel investment increased by 10% in 2022,
reaching over $1 trillion (indicator 4.2.1). The expansion of oil
and gas extractive activities has been supported through both
private and public financial flows. Across 2017–21, the 40 banks
that lend most to the fossil fuel sector collectively invested $489
billion annually in fossil fuels (annual average), with 52%
increasing their lending from 2010–16. Simultaneously, in 2020, 78%
of the countries assessed, responsible for 93% of all global CO2
emissions, still provided net direct fossil fuels subsidies
totalling $305 billion, further hindering fossil fuel phase-out
(indicator 4.2.4). Without a rapid response to course correct, the
persistent use and expansion of fossil fuels will ensure an
increasingly inequitable future that threatens the lives of billions
of people alive today.<br>
<br>
<b>The opportunity to deliver a healthy future for all</b><br>
Despite the challenges, data also expose the transformative health
benefits that could come from the transition to a zero-carbon
future, with health professionals playing a crucial role in ensuring
these gains are maximised. Globally, 775 million people still live
without electricity, and close to 1 billion people are still served
by health-care facilities without reliable energy. With structural
global inequities in the development of, access to, and use of clean
energy, only 2·3% of electricity in low HDI countries comes from
modern renewables (against 11% in very high HDI countries), and 92%
of households in low HDI countries still rely on biomass fuels to
meet their energy needs (against 7·5% in very high HDI countries;
indicators 3.1.1 and 3.1.2). In this context, the transition to
renewables can enable access to decentralised clean energy and,
coupled with interventions to increase energy efficiency, can reduce
energy poverty and power high quality health-supportive services. By
reducing the burning of dirty fuels (including fossil fuels and
biomass), such interventions could help avoid a large proportion of
the 1·9 million deaths that occur annually from dirty-fuel-derived,
outdoor, airborne, fine particulate matter pollution (PM2·5;
indicator 3.2.1), and a large proportion of the 78 deaths per
100 000 people associated with exposure to indoor air pollution
(indicator 3.2.2). Additionally, the just development of renewable
energy markets can generate net employment opportunities with safer,
more locally available jobs. Ensuring countries, particularly those
facing high levels of energy poverty, are supported in the safe
development, deployment, and adoption of renewable energy is key to
maximising health gains and preventing unjust extractive industrial
practices that can harm the health and livelihoods of local
populations and widen health inequities.<br>
With fossil fuels accounting for 95% of road transport energy
(indicator 3.1.3), interventions to enable and promote safe active
travel and zero-emission public transport can further deliver
emissions reduction, promote health through physical activity, and
avert many of the 460 000 deaths caused annually by
transport-derived PM2·5 pollution (indicator 3.2.1), and some of the
3·2 million annual deaths related to physical inactivity.
People-centred, climate-resilient urban redesign to improve building
energy efficiency, increase green and blue spaces, and promote
sustainable cooling, can additionally prevent heat-related health
harms, avoid air-conditioning-derived emissions (indicator 2.2.2),
and provide direct physical and mental health benefits.<br>
<br>
Additionally, food systems are responsible for 30% of global
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, with 57% of agricultural emissions
in 2020 being derived from the production of red meat and milk
(indicator 3.3.1). Promoting and enabling equitable access to
affordable, healthy, low-carbon diets that meet local nutritional
and cultural requirements can contribute to mitigation, while
preventing many of the 12·2 million deaths attributable to
suboptimal diets (indicator 3.3.2).<br>
<br>
The health community could play a central role in securing these
benefits, by delivering public health interventions to reduce air
pollution, enabling and supporting active travel and healthier
diets, and promoting improvements in the environmental conditions
and commercial activities that define health outcomes. Importantly,
the health sector can lead by example and transition to sustainable,
resource-efficient, net-zero emission health systems, thereby
preventing its 4·6% contribution to global GHG emissions, with
cascading impacts ultimately affecting the broader economy
(indicator 3.4).<br>
<br>
Some encouraging signs of progress offer a glimpse of the enormous
human benefits that health-centred action could render. Deaths
attributable to fossil-fuel-derived air pollution have decreased by
15·7% since 2005, with 80% of this reduction being the result of
reduced coal-derived pollution. Meanwhile the renewable energy
sector expanded to a historical high of 12·7 million employees in
2021 (indicator 4.2.2); and renewable energy accounted for 90% of
the growth in electricity capacity in 2022 (indicator 3.1.1).
Supporting this, global clean energy investment increased by 15% in
2022, to $1·6 trillion, exceeding fossil fuel investment by 61%
(indicator 4.2.1); and lending to the green energy sector rose to
$498 billion in 2021, approaching fossil fuel lending (indicator
4.2.7).<br>
<br>
Scientific understanding of the links between health and climate
change is rapidly growing, and although coverage lags in some of the
most affected regions, over 3000 scientific articles covered this
topic in 2022 (indicators 5.3.1 and 5.3.2). Meanwhile, the health
dimensions of climate change are increasingly acknowledged in the
public discourse, with 24% of all climate change newspaper articles
in 2022 referring to health, just short of the 26% in 2020
(indicator 5.1). Importantly, international organisations are
increasingly engaging with the health co-benefits of climate change
mitigation (indicator 5.4.2), and governments increasingly
acknowledge this link, with 95% of updated Nationally Determined
Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement now referring to
health—up from 73% in 2020 (indicator 5.4.1). <br>
<br>
<b>These trends signal what could be the start of a life-saving
transition.</b><br>
A people-centred transformation: putting health at the heart of
climate action<br>
With the world currently heading towards 3°C of heating, any further
delays in climate change action will increasingly threaten the
health and survival of billions of people alive today. If
meaningful, the prioritisation of health in upcoming international
climate change negotiations could offer an unprecedented opportunity
to deliver health-promoting climate action and pave the way to a
thriving future. However, delivering such an ambition will require
confronting the economic interests of the fossil fuel and other
health-harming industries, and delivering science-grounded,
steadfast, meaningful, and sustained progress to shift away from
fossil fuels, accelerate mitigation, and deliver adaptation for
health. Unless such progress materialises, the growing emphasis on
health within climate change negotiations risks being mere
healthwashing; increasing the acceptability of initiatives that
minimally advance action, and which ultimately undermine—rather than
protect—the future of people alive today and generations to come.<br>
<br>
Safeguarding people's health in climate policies will require the
leadership, integrity, and commitment of the health community. With
its science-driven approach, this community is uniquely positioned
to ensure that decision makers are held accountable, and foster
human-centred climate action that safeguards human health above all
else. The ambitions of the Paris Agreement are still achievable, and
a prosperous and healthy future still lies within reach. But the
concerted efforts and commitments of health professionals, policy
makers, corporations, and financial institutions will be needed to
ensure the promise of health-centred climate action becomes a
reality that delivers a thriving future for all.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)01859-7/fulltext">https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)01859-7/fulltext</a>
<p></p>
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</p>
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</p>
<i>[ Cli-migration of desperation - Bangladesh, Senegal ]</i><br>
<b>More Migration due to Climate Change? | Documentary</b><br>
Dec 3, 2023 #documentary #climatechange #migration<br>
Climate change is increasingly impacting migration patterns, with
experts predicting a significant rise in the movement of people
towards America and Europe in the coming years due to environmental
changes. <br>
<br>
The escalation of extreme weather events, rising sea levels, and
deteriorating living conditions in many parts of the world,
especially in climate-sensitive regions, are compelling people to
seek new habitats.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHS8DARvfXA">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHS8DARvfXA</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ More discussion -- From 7 years ago, a new Opinion Ted-x
Radical non discrimination ]</i><br>
<b>Will the future be more like Star Trek or Mad Max? | Alec Ross |
TEDxMidAtlantic</b><br>
Jun 23, 2017<br>
Technology is changing the world at a more rapid pace than ever. But
we remain stuck following a social contract that was written for the
industrial era, leading us to make work, life and policy decisions
that don't match today's reality. Diplomat, author, and innovation
researcher Alec Ross argues that it's time to develop a new social
contract written for the information age – which will determine the
future we live in.<br>
<br>
Alec Ross is one of America’s leading experts on innovation. He is
currently a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Johns Hopkins
University and the author of the New York Times bestseller The
Industries of the Future. Alec Ross recently served for four year as
Senior Advisor for Innovation to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
a role created for him by Secretary Clinton to maximize the
potential of technology and innovation in service of America’s
diplomatic agenda.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFx2oLmC8Cg">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFx2oLmC8Cg</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[The news archive - meats denote CO2
pollution ]</i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> <font size="+2"><i><b>December 4, 2008 </b></i></font>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> </font> December 4, 2008: <br>
• Washington Post writer Ezra Klein calls upon climate activists to
highlight the role meat consumption plays in fueling the climate
crisis.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://prospect.org/article/are-cows-worse-cars-0">http://prospect.org/article/are-cows-worse-cars-0</a><br>
<br>
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