Climate Change/Mass Extinction Megathread

Started by Syt, November 17, 2015, 05:50:30 AM

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HVC

Quote from: Grey Fox on March 17, 2023, 01:05:01 PMSuch a shame all these people get co-opted by the racist grifters from all over the world. They should be lefties, ffs. We should be looking into how the left can help them get out of their debts & financials issues while preserving their way of life.

So many farmers of today thinks that the industrialized way is the only way.

It is if you want to be competitive. People are bitching about food prices now, but organic/free range/"ethical" foods cost more before Covid then regular stuff costs now. Market can sustain a few niche producers, and farmers market hippies, but not a whole industry unless you just cut out foreign trade
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Grey Fox

Yes. That's a problem. We need government programs to help them transition adequately.
Colonel Caliga is Awesome.

HVC

Quote from: Grey Fox on March 17, 2023, 01:18:57 PMYes. That's a problem. We need government programs to help them transition adequately.

Not sure how you can, with free trade, really. Schemes like Canada's dairy program is a way, but then food gets very expensive and who probably be challenged at the WTO level. Government subsidies at the consumer level would go against trade laws, I believe. I guess who could pay people not to produce, but there goes the way of life argument .  It's a tough situation.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Jacob

Luckily for the Netherlands they're unlikely to be impacted by global warming,...

mongers

Given the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

Josquius

Quote from: mongers on March 20, 2023, 09:21:29 AMGiven the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?
Define no return.
The world isn't getting colder again any time soon (bring out the solar shield swarm) and we do have to get more of a move on, but I remain optimistic the rate of change should  avoid the worst provided we can keep cunts out of power.
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The Brain

Even if climate wasn't a problem getting rid of coal (for instance) would still be very important from a health perspective.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

crazy canuck

Quote from: mongers on March 20, 2023, 09:21:29 AMGiven the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?


There are a range of potential outcomes depending on what we do in the short term.  The nightmarish outcome of 4.4 degrees by 2081-2100 if we keep doing what we are doing.  The say that it is more likely than not that we will now exceed 1.5 even if we go low GHG emissions now. But there is still a chance to keep around that level of warming into the future.  But time is running out.

They have a whole section of the risks of irreversible changes in section B.3 of the Summary.  It is well worth a read.

https://report.ipcc.ch/ar6syr/pdf/IPCC_AR6_SYR_SPM.pdf



viper37

Quote from: mongers on March 20, 2023, 09:21:29 AMGiven the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?
Not yet.  We can still burn coal a little more.
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

crazy canuck

Quote from: viper37 on March 20, 2023, 02:47:15 PM
Quote from: mongers on March 20, 2023, 09:21:29 AMGiven the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?
Not yet.  We can still burn coal a little more.


Not actually the findings.

viper37

Quote from: crazy canuck on March 20, 2023, 02:53:06 PM
Quote from: viper37 on March 20, 2023, 02:47:15 PM
Quote from: mongers on March 20, 2023, 09:21:29 AMGiven the findings of the new UN climate report, are we now past the point of no return?
Not yet.  We can still burn coal a little more.


Not actually the findings.
I wasn't entirely serious.
We're not past the point of no return meaning we can still reverse it, but we can't really waste time.

Basically, we are fucked.
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.


Sheilbh

Quote from: Jacob on March 17, 2023, 08:10:38 PMLuckily for the Netherlands they're unlikely to be impacted by global warming,...
Yeah although this isn't really about emissions or climate change - it's another environmental/biodiversity issue around nitrogen. I think the reason it's interesting both in terms of the issue itself and the backlash is that I think it's a foretaste of what energy transition will involve politically. I thought the Charlemagne column on this was good (the criticism of Dutch veg - which also applies to some British veg - is also very fair):
QuoteThe cucumber Saudis: how the Dutch got too good at farming
A small, fertiliser-rich country sniffs the limits of its old model
Mar 23rd 2023

Visitors to dairy farms are always well advised to watch their step. Those inspecting the three dozen milking cows kept by Minke van Wingerden and her team have more to fear than landing in manure: the entire farm is set up on a floating platform, docked a 20-minute cycle ride away from Rotterdam's central railway station. One wrong step and you will wind up spluttering in the Nieuwe Maas river—as a couple of the cows have discovered (firemen fished them out of the harbour). Forget vistas of the placid Frisian countryside: these animals spend their days overlooking tankers and trucks unloading wares at Europe's biggest port. Throughout the day schijt-scooping robots scour the milking area, keeping it clean. On two lower floors of the barge, the cows' output is variously turned either into cheese or fertiliser.

Ms Van Wingerden's Floating Farm is the apotheosis of centuries of Dutch thinking about how to grow lots of food in a crowded corner of northern Europe. Since the age of Rembrandt and Vermeer, land has been reclaimed from the sea and windmills erected to drain the plains. Town-size greenhouses are built to grow tulips or vegetables. A food shortage during the second world war convinced the Dutch they needed to grow as much as their fields could manage. Calvinist industriousness turned the Netherlands into an unlikely agrarian powerhouse: with more than €100bn ($108bn) of annual farming sales overseas, it is the world's biggest exporter of agricultural products after America, a country more than 250 times its size. Some of that is re-exported imported food. But the Dutch make twice as much cheese per head as France.

Two questions have long dogged Dutch farming. The first is whether quantity made up for quality: having tasted the tomatoes, cucumbers and chilies grown in its hyper-efficient greenhouses, one may be forgiven for not being able to tell them apart. The second is whether its approach made any sense. The Netherlands is the most densely inhabited country in the EU bar tiny Malta; officials joke it is a city-state in the making. Efficient as its farmers may be, the sector is a footnote to the modern Dutch economy, employing just 2.5% of workers. Countries usually pick between having lots of farms or lots of people. The Dutch approach was to have their Gouda and eat it. That has landed both farmers and politicians in a heap of natural fertiliser.

Limits to the Dutch model of turbo-farming have been suspected for decades. Already in the 1980s, authorities realised that importing lots more animal feed would result in lots more animal excrement. Yet the limits of the land kept being tested: each acre of Dutch farm supports four times as many animals, by weight, as others in Europe. The result of all those digestive tracts has been a surfeit of excreted nitrogen, a key nutrient for plants but one that in excessive quantities can destabilise ecosystems. Cars and industry emit nitrogen compounds too. All this has contributed to damaging the soil and polluting waterways. Flora that thrive on excess nitrogen have been killing off plants that would otherwise manage to compete for resources. That in turn has knock-on effects, not all of which scientists understand.

Ernst van den Ende of Wageningen University, a food-research hub, says there is not much wrong with individual Dutch farms, which are often models of sustainability. The problem is that there are too many of them, pumping out too much nitrogen. For more than a decade there have been efforts (mostly ineffectual) to cut back such emissions to meet EU rules that protect nature reserves. But in 2019 things came to a head. A decree from the highest Dutch court gave wishy-washy laws unexpected bite. Every activity that led to nitrogen being produced—including the construction of buildings, roads and other infrastructure—would henceforth require cuts in nitrogen elsewhere. The country has a housing shortage, but new building has been throttled by the rule. Daytime speed limits on motorways were cut from 130kph to 100kph in the hope that lower emissions might let other bits of the economy keep going. Schiphol airport, one of the world's busiest, resorted to buying farms to shut them down so planes could take off.

The crisis has been all-encompassing. A bastion of free-market liberalism in Europe has morphed into something akin to a planned economy, with a "Minister for Nature and Nitrogen Policy" as lead commissar. In the end, it became clear a piecemeal approach would not cut it. Last year a sweeping plan to halve nitrogen emissions by 2030 was unveiled. The government said it would pay €24bn to buy out as many as 3,000 big emitters, meaning mostly farms. Livestock numbers would be cut by nearly a third. The era of ever-increasing agricultural exports was over.

Sacred cows, this way please

Strangely, even in a country bursting at the seams, picking people over cows turns out to be politically fraught. The prospect of buy-outs or expropriations fuelled farmer protests across the country. (Think burning hay-bales and nitrogen-rich animal matter dumped on motorways.) Last week the revolt hit the ballot box. A newish party representing farmers triumphed in local elections on March 15th, topping the polls that elect the nationwide senate as well as regional governments. The farmers' party got 1.5m votes, 19% of the total, in a country that employs just 244,000 people in agriculture. City-dwellers backed it out of a nostalgic attachment to farmers and resentment against nagging authorities. Whether the government can force through its nitrogen cuts is up in the air.

Other countries are heading for nitrogen crises too; neighbouring Belgium, also pretty crowded, already has one. But the wider parallel is with carbon emissions, which Europe plans to cut to "net zero" by 2050. That will demand adaptations well beyond what the Dutch have experienced with nitrogen. The Netherlands, a generally well-run place, has made a hash of adapting its economy to ecological constraints it knew about for decades. That does not bode well for everyone else.
Let's bomb Russia!

viper37

I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

Sheilbh

And following on from the Norwegian arms manufacturing having an issue getting energy because of a Tik Tok data centre, this piece on how the Netherlands farming/nitrogen crisis interacts with data centre building is really interesting:
https://www.wired.com/story/microsoft-netherlands-hyperscale-data-centers/

Particularly focused on one Microsoft hyperscale data centre and, as demonstrated by Irish campaigners, where there are concerns similar data centres for Google and Aamazon may overlaod the grid thus interacts with energy. The scale of energy required given the context of European energy supply and concerns about de-industrialisation is really striking. There may be a point where it's not zero sum - but at the minute I think there are very real losers and winners (and I'm a little worried the winners so far are projects that employ relatively few people and companies who don't pay their taxes).
Let's bomb Russia!