Author: ajohnstone

It is your future



The long-awaited IPCC report has now been made public and it does not make for any reassuring reading.

A 2m rise in sea levels by the end of this century “cannot be ruled out”.

The IPCC report is a “Code red for humanity, the alarm bells are deafening,” said UN Secretary-General, António Guterres. “If we combine forces now, we can avert climate catastrophe. But, as today’s report makes clear, there is no time for delay and no room for excuses.”



As if we needed to be told from all our own viewing of extreme weather events around the world Prof Ed Hawkins, from the University of Reading, UK, and one of the report’s authors, the scientists cannot be any clearer on this point.

“It is a statement of fact, we cannot be any more certain; it is unequivocal and indisputable that humans are warming the planet…The consequences will continue to get worse for every bit of warming,” 



Petteri Taalas, Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organization, said: ” We have begun observing extremes more often than before.” 



Nowhere on Earth is escaping rising temperatures, worse floods, hotter wildfires or more searing droughts.



 “If we do not halt our emissions soon, our future climate could well become some kind of hell on Earth,” says Prof Tim Palmer at the University of Oxford.



The authors say this warming is “already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe”.



The  Paris climate pact of 2015 aimed to keep the rise in global temperatures well below 2C this century and to pursue efforts to keep it under 1.5C. Under all the emissions scenarios considered by the scientists, both targets will be broken this century unless huge cuts in carbon take place. The report explains that 1.5C will be reached by 2040 in all scenarios. If emissions aren’t slashed in the next few years, this will happen even earlier. The new report’s best estimate is the middle of 2034. If emissions do not fall in the next couple of decades, then 3C of heating looks likely – a catastrophe. And if they don’t fall at all, the report says, then we are on track for 4C to 5C, which is apocalypse territory.



Tipping points are abrupt and irreversible changes to crucial Earth systems that have huge impacts and are of increasing concern to scientists. The collapse of major Atlantic currents, ice caps, or the Amazon rainforest “cannot be ruled out”, the report warns.



“For the tipping points, it’s clear that every extra tonne of CO2 emitted today is pushing us into a minefield of feedback effects tomorrow,” says Prof Dave Reay, at the University of Edinburgh, UK.



 The report’s authors are confident and hopeful that if global emissions are cut in half by 2030 and reach net zero by the middle of this century, we can halt and possibly reverse the rise in temperatures.



Abdalah Mokssit, secretary of the IPCC said, “We never dictate any policy to any country – it is for the governments to take the decisions.”

The world has suffered a global pandemic. How did that go? This blog can only say that from the experience of the scientific advice being taken by politicians concerning how to contain coronavirus being, we do not share that optimism.

Fredrick Njehu, Christian Aid’s senior climate change and energy adviser for Africa, highlighting the “changing rainfall patterns or overbearing heat” endured by the continent in recent years. He added: “The important thing now is that rich world governments make up for lost time and act quickly to reduce emissions and deliver promised financial support for the vulnerable.”



Once more the blog can only point to the utter failure to provide Africa with vaccine despite all the pledges.



“Too many ‘net-zero’ climate plans have been used to greenwash pollution and business as usual,” says Teresa Anderson at ActionAid International.







Quote of the Day

 In response to the latest U.N. report, Greta Thunberg said world leaders had ignored scientists’ previous warnings about climate change:

“I expect them to go out and have big speeches, or press releases, or posts on social media where they say the climate crisis is very important and we are doing everything that we can,” Thunberg said. “As it is now, nothing is changing. The only thing that’s changing is the climate.”

Argentinians Suffers Economic Misery

 About 42 percent of Argentina’s 19 million people live below the poverty line, with unemployment at 10.2 percent amid an economic downturn worsened by COVID-19.

Tens of thousands of Argentinians have protested across the country over poverty and unemployment as an economic crisis worsened by the coronavirus pandemic continues to hit working people hard. Protests also took place in Buenos Aires and other parts of the country, including in Argentina’s second city of Cordoba and the western city of Mendoza.

The soup kitchens are seeing whole families coming to eat and many of the children have to be attended to by health professionals because they are malnourished.

“If you don’t protest, if you don’t make noise, they won’t listen to you. You can’t achieve much by staying silent,” said Estela Avila, 59, who is the president of a new union called Asociación de Trabajadoras del Hogar y Afines (Association of Household and Related Workers).

Caste and Child Stunting

 That India performs much worse on stunting than countries poorer than it. India has one of the highest rates of child stunting in the world: more than a third of its children under five years are short enough for their age to be counted as “stunted” under the World Health Organisation’s guidelines. This is more than the stunting rate in sub-Saharan Africa, one of the poorest regions in the world.

Researchers have theorised that it has to do with unhygienic conditions found in India due to the prevalence of open defecation as well as the fact that daughters are mistreated in India compared to sons.

Along with hygiene and gender, a third factor might be making India’s rates of stunting shoot up: caste and communal discrimination.

A new paper by Ashwini Deshpande, professor of economics at Ashoka University and Rajesh Ramachandran, a post-doctoral researcher at the faculty of economics at Heidelberg University, finds that stunting varies starkly when it comes to caste and community in India.

Most research till now has compared India as a whole in trying to determine why it lagged other countries so severely when it came to child health. Contrary to the all-India trend, upper-caste Hindus actually have stunting rates (26%) lower than sub-Saharan African children. However, Indian children from Dalit and Adivasi communities (Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe) have stunting rates significantly higher than those of African children. A similar trend holds for Other Backward Classes, a vast group of castes in between upper castes and Dalits in the social order. for Dalit children, their rates of stunting sharply increase in relation to the practice of untouchability.

Casteism and communalism: Why Indian children are shorter than even their counterparts in Africa (scroll.in)



Gunboat Diplomacy

 



In the middle of the pain of the pandemic last year and having cut humanitarian foreign aid, the UK government chose to announce a nearly 17 billion pound increase in military spending spread over four years.

Challenging the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, in March, the government announced it would raise the cap on the number of warheads the country possessed by a staggering 40 percent, and that it would no longer make public the number of operational nuclear weapons that it controlled.

The U.K. recently sent an aircraft carrier and broader naval strike group into the South China Sea. 

This follows another naval deployment when the U.K. sent a navy strike force into the waters off Crimea — territory illegally annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014  to show Britain’s sympathy for Ukrainian claims to sovereignty over Crimea.  A confrontation came horrifyingly close after Russia scrambled fighter jets and navy vessels reportedly fired warning shots at the approaching British ships.

Britain is now the only G7 country cutting rather than increasing its international aid commitments. 

It is, at the same time, spending more on its military than any other G7 member apart from the United States, making it the fifth-highest military spender on the planet. 

In 2020, Germany spent 1.4 percent of its GDP on its military, and France, itself in the middle of a significant military build-up, spent 2.1 percent. Britain, by contrast, spent 2.2 percent.

The UK Is Embarking on Largest Military Spending Hike Since the Cold War (truthout.org)

US Military – Climate Polluters

  We must brace ourselves for ever-rising sea levels: extreme weather, drought, famine — all of which, according to the World Bank, could result in 143-million climate refugees by 2050.

The largest single U.S. emitter of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) is the Pentagon, the Department of Defense.

Brown University’s Cost of War Project reports America’s military’s GHG exceed those of many industrialized nations, such as Denmark, Sweden and Portugal, with the “War on Terror” alone producing 1,267 million metric tons of GHG’s, the carbon equivalent of a 12-million pound mountain of coal. One B-52 Stratofortress, Boeing’s long-range bomber, consumes as much fuel in an hour as the average car driver uses in seven years.

The Pentagon Is Killing Us – Consortiumnews

Afghanistan War Escalates

 


As was expected, American and NATO withdrawal did not mean peace had been brought to the Afghan peoples. The Taliban have managed to take control of vast parts of the countryside and now has concentrated attacks on a number of large cities including Kunduz, Herat and Lashkar Gah. In southern Nimroz province, the capital of Zaranj appeared to be the first provincial capital to fall to the TalibanUS aircraft pounded Taliban positions in southern Afghanistan’s Helmand province as the insurgents closed a major border crossing with neighbouring Pakistan. In Helmand’s provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, airstrikes destroyed a market in the centre of the city – an area controlled by the Taliban. The Taliban now control nine out of the 10 districts of the city.

General Kenneth McKenzie, head of the US Army Central Command, told reporters in Kabul, “The Taliban are attempting to create a sense of inevitability about their campaign. They are wrong,” he said.”Taliban victory is not inevitable.” Famous last words?

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office advises British citizens to “leave now by commercial means because of the worsening security situation”, adding: “The level of consular assistance the British embassy can provide in Afghanistan is extremely limited, including in a crisis. Do not rely on the FCDO being able to evacuate you from Afghanistan in an emergency. Terrorists are very likely to try to carry out attacks in Afghanistan. Specific methods of attack are evolving and increasing in sophistication. You should note an overall increased threat to western interests in Kabul. Follow the instructions of local authorities. There is a high threat of kidnapping throughout the country.”

United Nations’ Afghanistan envoy, Deborah Lyons, explained Afghanistan had now entered a “new, deadlier, and more destructive phase.”

Vassily Nebenzia who is Russia’s UN Ambassador expressed concern at the level of deterioration. “With the withdrawal of foreign forces, the outlook looks grim.” He added that “the prospects of slipping into full scale and protracted civil war, unfortunately, is a stark reality,” 

American Health Care Broken

 During a pandemic Five of the most profitable health insurance companies in the U.S. brought in over $11 billion in profits in the second quarter of 2021.

Between April and June of this year, UnitedHealth Group, Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, and Humana reported profits of $4.37 billion, $2.78 billion, $1.8 billion, $1.47 billion, and $588 million, respectively, in sharp contrast with the hardships faced by many Americans, albeit some customers will see rebates in premiums if they hold health insurance in the future.

According to a Commonwealth Fund study published last month, 36% of insured adults in the U.S. surveyed between March and June reported struggling with medical bills. Unsurprisingly, the 45% of the population that was infected with Covid-19, lost income or lost their employer-based coverage had higher rates of medical debt.

“A lot of public health departments are really still struggling to find funds for contact tracing [and] testing even when the local insurer was sitting on huge profits,” Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at Johns Hopkins University explained, adding “I think part of the dysfunction of the U.S. response was the fact that money was accumulating in one part of the healthcare universe while it was desperately needed in another part.”

 The Commonwealth Fund released a report showing that even as the U.S. spends far more as a percentage of GDP on healthcare than other rich countries, its for-profit system once again ranks dead last when it comes to access, efficiency, equity, and outcomes.

‘This Ain’t Right!’: Top US Insurers Made $11 Billion in 2nd Quarter | Common Dreams News

Capitalism on Green Life-Support

 



In an open letter, 21 leading U.S. scientists urged Biden and federal lawmakers to “go big on climate action and to do so now.”

They say, “As our nation reels from extreme heatwaves, drought, wildfires, and abnormally warm ocean waters fueled an early start to a projected more active than normal Atlantic hurricane season, we are reminded that climate change is here and already exerting a fearsome toll on people, critical ecosystems, and our economy.”

The letter, organized by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), emphasizes how “science shows that we must take immediate action to sharply reduce heat-trapping emissions to limit the worst climate change impacts, protect public health and lives, and limit economic harms. We also have a tremendous opportunity to invest in a climate-resilient economy, powered by clean energy, which can bring benefits to all communities in a just and equitable way.” 

Once more the sentiments are sincere but the solutions indicated short-sighted. They point to Biden’s initial American Jobs Plan as a way forward and call for a wishlist of policies.

● Implementing a program to achieve robust power sector emissions reductions

 ● Fully funding clean energy tax incentives 

● Bolstering transmission development and grid modernization 

● Facilitating the replacement of polluting resources with clean alternatives 

● Supporting a fair transition for fossil fuel workers and communities 

● Improving the efficiency of our energy use, for example through funding low-income home energy and weatherization assistance programs. 

● Helping transit agencies and school districts buy electric buses 

● Incentivizing electric vehicle (EV) purchases 

 ● Electrifying medium- and heavy-duty vehicles 

 ● Deploying EV charging infrastructure

But as this blog often says, if wishes were horses, all beggars would ride. Even if these by some degree of miracle do get enacted, the fundamental problem of the economic law of capital accumulation and market expansion to achieve ever-greater profits remain untouched.

Dead Zones

 Dead zones develop when fertilizers and nutrients from farmland drain into oceans or lakes, creating an algae bonanza that eventually dies and decomposes. As the algae decompose, it depletes the waters of oxygen, suffocating species that live in the area.

Studies show that fish in hypoxic waters change what they eat, which affects what people can catch. Dead zones also make commercially important species like shrimp less available in the Gulf and kill fish and crabs off the coast of the Pacific north-west.

 The fertilizer pollution has caused an estimated $2.4bn in damage to fisheries and marine habitat every year since 1980, the Union of Concerned Scientists said in a study.

Scientists recently surveyed the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico around Louisiana and Texas and what they discovered was a larger-than-average area of oxygen-depleted water – a “dead zone” where nothing can live, about 4m acres of habitat in the Gulf are unusable for fish and bottom-dwelling species.

The waters off Oregon have had hypoxic areas every year since 2002. But this was a record year in Oregon as well. In Oregon, the global climate crisis is making the problem worse: warmer waters hold less oxygen than cold waters, encouraging the growth of dead zones. In addition, as more carbon is absorbed into the oceans, the waters become more acidic – in turn making it harder for creatures like shellfish and crabs to grow their shells.

In 2001, a task force of state and federal agencies set a goal of keeping the dead zone’s five-year average to no greater than 1,900 sq miles. This summer’s dead zone is about three times larger than that. 

 “Without a significant, concentrated effort to reduce nitrogen runoff from farms and livestock operations, Gulf Coast communities will continue to bear the costs of the dead zone,” said Rebecca Boehm, an economist with the Union of Concerned Scientists food and environment program in a statement.“The dead zone has not meaningfully shrunk in the last 30 years, and we are no closer to the goals set by the Hypoxia Task Force. Policymakers need to rethink their strategy, or we will find ourselves back here next year with the same bad news.”

Dead zones spread along Oregon coast and Gulf of Mexico, study shows | Oceans | The Guardian