Doomers
- World surpasses key warming threshold across an entire year for the first timewww.cnbc.com World surpasses key warming threshold across an entire year for the first time
Scientists said the findings reaffirm the urgent need to slash planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions
- The Profound Loneliness of Being Collapse Awaremedium.com The Profound Loneliness of Being Collapse Aware
Knowing that civilization is going to collapse can be a profoundly lonely experience. Let’s find one other and enjoy the time we have left.
About the author's struggle to find someone among his friends to speak to about collapse. He says, "Most of all, I want someone to hug me and say, “I know. I’m scared, too.” Lots of good links in there for further reading.
- Misinformed critique of doomerismwww.theguardian.com We can’t afford to be climate doomers | Rebecca Solnit
It often seems that people are searching harder for evidence we’re defeated than that we can win
I ran across this article recently and thought I'd post it for comment. Ms Solnit addresses what she considers "doomer evangelism", and aims her criticism directly toward folks like me and others who might share my views. Although she makes some salient points, I regard most of her supporting assertions as not representative of my reaction to climate catastrophe. Not surprisingly, I take such misrepresentations personally and will take a moment to address one of these distortions.
Ms Solnit makes her thesis one that describes doomers as those who have surrendered in advance, do nothing to participate in efforts to achieve carbon neutrality, and who, by these actions, encourage others to do nothing. That is simply not true. Setting aside the fact that individual participation is a negligible activity, I'd posit that most doomers are already engaged in activities that support efforts to mitigate their own contribution to warming the planet.
I'll point to myself as an example: I live in a rural northeastern US community, where mass transit is nonexistent. When I did live in a city, I used public transportation whenever I could. I drive a hybrid vehicle and have plans to purchase an EV as soon as I can. I engage in recycling and avail myself of the local composting program. I am deeply cognizant of my water and electricity usage and actively seek ways to limit that consumption. I limit my purchases of products that use single-use plastic by buying in bulk whenever possible. I buy local produce and meat whenever possible, almost exclusively during growing season. I support local, regional and national policies that encourage conservation of natural resources and those that limit the release of carbon into the atmosphere.
These efforts are expensive and consume a larger than average financial burden for me, especially considering that I am retired, and living on a nearly fixed income. I am doing everything I can possibly do on an individual level to contribute to a healthier planet. I know it's not enough, and I recognize that larger societal and political realities prevent me from doing more. Yet, Ms Solnit would arrogantly declare my efforts to be settling for the worst outcome by doing nothing.
I have many more issues with Ms Solnit's view which I haven't the time or energy to presently address. Among them is her premise that my considerations are based on outdated research or misinformation. I'll save that discussion for another day.
- "I Thought We Had More Time"
A short essay about looming catastrophe and people's reactions to it.
- Nobody knows just how bad things will getwww.theguardian.com What frightens me about the climate crisis is we don’t know how bad things really are | Roger Harrabin
As the barrage of bad news from places like Greece continues, all we can be certain of is there are many surprises lying ahead, says analyst Roger Harrabin
FTFA: Former IPCC chief Prof Bob Watson, said: “I am very concerned. None of the observed changes so far (with a 1.2C temperature rise) are surprising. But they are more severe than we predicted 20 years ago, and more severe than the predictions of five years ago. We probably underestimated the consequences.”
- Update on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)www.realclimate.org What is happening in the Atlantic Ocean to the AMOC?
For various reasons I'm motivated to provide an update on my current thinking regarding the slowdown and tipping point of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). I attended a two-day AMOC session at the IUGG Conference the week before last, there's been interesting new papers, and in...
10 basic points on the health of the AMOC, which if halts, will kill everything in the ocean.
- What happens when there's not enough food for everyone?www.theguardian.com With our food systems on the verge of collapse, it’s the plutocrats v life on Earth | George Monbiot
Climate breakdown and crop losses threaten our survival, but the ultra-rich find ever more creative ways to maintain the status quo, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot
The green revolution ended in 2015, when the number of food insecure people began to rise. Around 2.3 billion people in the world were moderately or severely food insecure in 2021, or nearly 30 percent of the global population – more than 350 million more people than in 2019.
It's just a matter of time until simultaneous crop failures, exacerbated by a non-resilient agricultural system, will force conflict between the few maintainers of the current economic system and everyone else.
What the ultra-rich want is to sustain and extend the economic system that put them where they are, but that system is unsustainable.
- Yet another underestimated risk of climate catastrophewww.sciencealert.com Researchers: We've Underestimated The Risk of Simultaneous Crop Failures Worldwide
The risks of harvest failures in multiple global breadbaskets have been underestimated, according to a study Tuesday that researchers said should be a "wake up call" about the threat climate change poses to our food systems.
It seems as though every week brings news that some predictor of climate change has been given less consequential value than warranted.
This week brings news of research that examines the likelihood of simultaneous global crop failures, and it's not a happy outlook.
- The Hill offers toxicly positive article on climate catastrophethehill.com We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started
As hot as it is now, the summer of 2023 might be considered a “cool” summer to future generations.
FTFA: >Admittedly, this may all seem hopeless. But unlike a terminal illness, we know exactly what the problem is, we know exactly how to fix it, and we have all the solutions we need now. What is required is that we pay attention and get serious — quickly. Our future depends on it.
Yeah, right.
- The De-Population Bombwww.hoover.org The De-Population Bomb
In 1970, Stanford professor Paul Ehrlich published a famous book, The Population Bomb, in which he described a disastrous future for humanity: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.”
>In 1970, Stanford professor Paul Ehrlich published a famous book, The Population Bomb, in which he described a disastrous future for humanity: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.”
Looking at population demographics, it's plain to see we're in trouble now. A society with no babies, has no future. We're all gonna starve to death with food riots tearing apart the fabric of society while the cities all burn.
Better make sure you got your long term food and water storage, seed banks and grid-out cooking skills up to snuff!
- Another deadly setback for honeybeeswww.theguardian.com US honeybees suffer second deadliest season on record
Nearly 50% of US bee colonies died off last year, although efforts have helped the overall bee population remain ‘relatively stable’
- Study predicts potential ecosystem collapse as early as 2030www.sciencealert.com Global Ecosystems Risk Collapsing Decades Before We Predicted
Across the world, rainforests are becoming savanna or farmland, savanna is drying out and turning into desert, and icy tundra is thawing.
This study, newly published in Nature Sustainability, explores the influence of primary stress, additional stress, and erratic events on Earth System, using data from 4 recent environmental collapse events. As one might expect, results pointed to -39% - 80% acceleration in global ecosystem collapse predictions, potentially advancing current models' catastrophe deadlines from 2100 to 2030.
- 3M reaches historic settlement over PFAS contaminationgrist.org 3M reaches historic settlement over PFAS contamination
1 in 20 Americans have the "forever chemicals" in their drinking water. The new, $10.3-billion deal will kickstart the cleanup process.
1 in 20 Americans have the "forever chemicals" in their drinking water. The new, $10.3-billion deal will kickstart the clean-up process.
- The Busy Worker's Handbook to the Apocalypse
This is a good, concise and readable guide to the major data points about global warming.
- California's dam system unprepared for severe weatherwww.nytimes.com The Trillion-Gallon Question: What if California’s Dams Fail?
One superstorm could send walls of water sweeping through populated areas. There’s not much time to act.
(paywalled)
Like most of this country's infrastructure, California's dams were built without regard for the truly severe weather that climate change makes possible. In the US, electrical grids, coastlines, transportation networks, communication facilities are all vulnerable to extreme weather.
What, if anything, is your community doing to prepare its infrastructure for the ravages that rising temperatures will bring?
- North Atlantic marine heat wave more severe than predictedwww.cnn.com The North Atlantic is experiencing a 'totally unprecedented' marine heat wave | CNN
Temperatures in parts of the North Atlantic Ocean are soaring off the charts, with an “exceptional” marine heat wave happening off the coasts of the United Kingdom and Ireland, sparking concerns about impacts on marine life.
Once again, we are experiencing the intensity of a climate event that far surpasses what was ever predicted under current conditions.
Marine heat waves (MHW) have increased 20-fold, according to this study. It is projected that such events, occurring once every hundreds to thousands of years under a pre-industrial climate, will occur at least every decade under 1.5ºC conditions and annually under 3.0ºC conditions.
However, the MHW currently underway in the North Atlantic is “very exceptional,” said Mika Rantanen, a researcher at the Finnish Meteorological Institute and is “way beyond the worst-case predictions for the changing climate of the region."
- Grim results when applying superconductivity models to predict future climate outcomes in the Anthropocenewww.giantfreakinrobot.com Earth Is On The Brink Of Total Chaos, Here's Why
A new report shows just how close Earth is to reaching total chaos, and unfortunately, it isn't that surprising.
Published 21 April, 2022, this not-yet-peer-reviewed study (pdf) applied the Ginzburg-Landau theory (Wikipedia) to model future conditions on this planet. Predictably, even the best case scenarios presented dismal outcomes.
- Plankton could accelerate warmingscitechdaily.com When Carbon Sinks Sink: New Research Uncovers a Climate Change Time Bomb
A new study reveals that rising global temperatures could convert widespread microbial communities worldwide from carbon sinks to carbon emitters, potentially triggering climate change tipping points. These findings were recently published in the British Ecological Society's journal, Functional Ecol
Mixotrophic microbes are single-celled organisms such as plankton and paramecium that are able to switch between photosynthesis and predation for survival. Plankton is the base food source for all marine trophic levels. Normally, these microbes employ photosynthesis, absorbing carbon and providing 70% of atmospheric oxygen. But their switch to eating other single-celled critters releases carbon.
The mechanism for the switch is not well understood, but appears to be triggered by a rise in the temperature of their environment. Their switching could indicate a tipping point for sustainable marine life and accelerate global temperature increase.
- What has led you to doomerism?
Although the linked study examined attitudes of those 16 to 25 years of age, there are many outside that range (myself included) who experience extreme pessimism about the future of human existence.
What experiences led you to your own conclusions about the fate of humanity? Do those conclusions affect your everyday decisions? How does your acceptance of imminent calamity shape your long term goals?
I'll start. I was but a child in the 1960's (Boomer II), born into a family deeply involved in charismatic Christianity. Fear surrounding the predicted events of a highly anticipated second coming of Christ (The Rapture, Tribulation, etc.) combined with the exaggerated cultural threat of communist aggression and the certainty of thermonuclear destruction created a perfect storm of personal despair and dread by the time I was 9 years old. As the fundamentalist Christian culture edged toward prosperity gospel and Seven Mountains, my mind turned towards nihilistic and scientific literature.
By my teenage years, I was solidly convinced that nothing short of a miracle could save humanity prior to my 30th birthday. Yet, here we are. The angst of my childhood absolutely shaped the trajectory of my life. Secondary education seemed a senseless enough endeavor to ignore. I considered reproduction to be a cruel endeavor. I embraced agnosticism, punk culture and anarchism.
The privileged existence of being white, privileged and cis male has served me well, and I can't say that I'm unhappy. I find succor in the growing probability that a natural death will spare me the majority of horrors to come. And I am sad and angry for what subsequent generations are about to experience.
What's your story?
- Temperatures as high as 44.7 C kills nearly 100 in Indiaapnews.com Nearly 100 die as India struggles with a sweltering heat wave in 2 most populous states
Indian officials say at least 96 people have died in two of the most populous states over the last several days with swaths of the country reeling from scorching heat.
Heat waves of this nature are becoming more frequent as our climate catastrophe continues.
- Proposing a 1.0°C Climate Target For a Safer Futurejournals.plos.org Proposing a 1.0°C climate target for a safer future
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concludes that climate change has already caused substantial damages at the current 1.2°C of global warming and that warming of 1.5°C would elevate risks of a wide-range of climate tipping points. For example, wet-bulb temperatures are already exceeding ...
The technology to do this exists, but it will never happen. Like any other organism, humans will use up all available finite resources until death is certain.
- Is the War in Ukraine a Global War?
Experts seem divided on whether or not Russia's invasion of Ukraine already qualifies as a global war. There's no doubt that the conflict is having negative consequences on an international scale. There are those who claim that these consequences are grave enough to eventually end society as we have come to know it.
I think anyone can envision a scenario whereby V. Putin makes a decision that provokes other powers into direct armed conflict.
- Four Chartswww.cnn.com Four alarming charts that show just how extreme the climate is right now | CNN
Soaring temperatures. Unusually hot oceans. Record high levels of carbon pollution in the atmosphere and record low Antarctic ice. We’re only halfway through 2023 and so many climate records are being broken.
Most of the media is referring to these charts as "alarming". Has no one been alarmed by previous charts?
- Is "Negative Emissions" Even Attainable?www.theguardian.com From the oceans to ‘net zero’ targets, we’re in denial about the climate crisis | Adam Morton
The scientific consensus is we need to aim for negative emissions by phasing out fossil fuels, not just removing carbon from the atmosphere
(opinion)
More bad news... Every climate catastrophe indicator is far above what anyone even considered just a year ago. It appears that the rate of climate change is beginning to increase exponentially, further evidence that enough climate tipping points have been reached to render change unstoppable.
- Climate Activist Jailed In Vietnam
(opinion, pay-wall)
Vietnam's leading climate activist, Hoang Thi Minh Hong, has been arrested and jailed for "tax evasion". She, her husband, and 15 staffers of the Center of Hands-on Action and Networking for Growth and Environment (CHANGE) were detained on May 31. On June 1, she was formally charged and imprisoned while the others were released.
With this arrest, Ms Hoang joins 5 other climate activists in detention, all charged under vague laws governing corporate taxation.
Consequentially, Vietnam risks losing $15.5 billion of funding from EU and G7 countries to assist them in achieving net-zero carbon status by 2050.
- Climate Activism By Legal Actionwww.vox.com Why Montana kids are suing the state over climate change
A lawsuit in the state of Montana could set a legal precedent on climate action.
It is clear that Republicans and Democrats alike will never do enough to solve climate catastrophe. Can America's ambivalence be reversed through the legal system?
- Saying It Out Loud Isn't Enoughwww.newsweek.com Saying Out Loud What Others Won't Even Whisper About Climate Change
Kerry is right that a population of 10 billion won't be sustainable, but this spokesperson for the world's richest country is pointing this out without offering any solutions.
It's all fine and good for John Kerry to utter a fundamental truth about a major driver of climate catastrophe, but it is a useless proclamation without offering a solution.
Have enough tipping points been breached that there are no prescriptions to offer?
- The Montreal Protocol Reducing Arctic Meltingwww.washingtonpost.com Analysis | A 36-Year-Old Treaty Is Slowing the Arctic Meltdown
The Montreal Protocol shows how sound policy and innovation can find cleaner, more efficient ways to halt climate damage.
(Washington Post articles are pay-walled)
The Montreal Protocol, with a mere 46 signatories in 1987, has reduced chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) use to 10% of peak 1974 levels. CFCs, typically used as refrigerant, are powerful greenhouse gases that degrade the Earth's ozone layer as they break down, allowing harmful UV radiation to reach the surface. A United Nations study estimates that the ozone layer will be restored to pre-industrial levels over most populated areas by 2040, with polar regions to follow in the coming decades.
It is also estimated that had CFC use continued, global temperatures would now be an additional 1 degree Celsius warmer.
- Climate Change Is But One Civilization-Ending Event
A mass extinction of life on Earth as a result of willfully generated climate change is certainly one of the most daunting outcomes that civilization currently faces. But it is certainly not the only danger.
Nuclear war, killer asteroids, coronal mass ejections, artificial intelligence, pandemic, super-volcanoes, and many other events of lessening probability have the potential to end civilization as we know it before all of the honeybees die.
Leaving aside the certainty of climate catastrophe, what other events could occur that have the potential to destroy our civilization?
- The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation Is Slowingwww.wired.com Ocean Currents Are Slowing, With Potentially Devastating Effects
Melting Antarctic ice is disrupting the movement of deep seawater, which could further destabilize weather patterns around the world.
By any stretch of the imagination, this is not fresh news. The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) has been observed to be slowing for several years now, and the consequences of losing the cooling properties of the oceans have been long established.
Is it too late to do anything to prevent mass extinction? Have enough tipping points been breached that render a reversal impossible?
- Climate Crisis Is on Track to Push One-Third of Humanity Out of Its Most Livable Environmentwww.propublica.org Climate Crisis Is on Track to Push One-Third of Humanity Out of Its Most Livable Environment
As conditions that best support life shift toward the poles, more than 600 million people are already living outside of a crucial “climate niche,” facing more extreme heat, rising food scarcity and higher death rates.
I think it will happen far sooner than we're being told.
- Scientists Know More Than They Saywww.usatoday.com Climate change warning signs started in the 1800s. Here's what humanity knew and when.
Climate change concern has recently skyrocketed, but scientists began warning humanity in the 1800s.
I am increasingly convinced that climate scientists withhold information vital to understanding how dire Earth's climate situation really is.
- Global greenhouse gas emissions at all-time high, study findswww.theguardian.com Global greenhouse gas emissions at all-time high, study finds
Scientists say world is burning through ‘carbon budget’ that can be emitted while staying below 1.5C
I think it's just too late for humanity to turn this around.