WTF Climate Change News

Kokoro Fasching

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I swear to Thor, if any of you blame this on dinosaurs dying off in Antarctica, I'm taking us all out.
No, it is because the weight of all those dinosaur souls were so heavy, they sunk to the bottom of the planet, and pooled there to help act as a stabilization base for the spinning planet. Once we suck up all that oil, the planet will begin spinning in random directions and toss all the humans off into space.
 

Beebo Brink

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The UK’s year of climate U-turns exposes a deeper failure
We’re now halfway through the UK government’s critical decade for tackling climate change – and 2025 is fast becoming a year of climate U-turns.

Airport expansions have been approved, the phaseout of gas-fired boilers shelved and, under the government’s latest industrial strategy, green levies on industrial energy bills that support renewables have been slashed. All while key indicators of global climate stability are deteriorating.
 

Innula Zenovka

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Reuters: Drier weather threatens India's tea exports, global supply

Evernote Link

Under blazing skies at a tea plantation in India's northeastern state of Assam, picker Kamini Kurmi wears an umbrella fastened over her head to keep her hands free to pluck delicate leaves from the bushes.

“When it’s really hot, my head spins and my heart starts beating very fast,” said Kurmi, one of the scores of women employed for their dextrous fingers, instead of machines that harvest most conventional crops within a matter of days.
“It wasn’t like this before,” said Manju Kurmi, who has worked in tea gardens for 40 years, during which she used to pick about 110 kg (243 lb) of leaves a day. “But now that it’s grown hotter, I can only manage around 60 kilograms (132 lb).”
The monsoon, Assam’s key source of rain as summer and winter showers have nearly disappeared, brought rains 38% below average this season. That has helped shorten the peak output season to just a few months, narrowing the harvesting window, said senior tea planter Prabhat Bezboruah.
 

Beebo Brink

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Corpus Christi Folds on Its Desalination Gamble - Inside Climate News
After a decade of efforts and tens of millions of dollars invested, the Corpus Christi City Council moved to cancel a contract for a seawater desalination plant in a 1 a.m. vote Wednesday at the end of a rancorous, 13-hour public meeting.

The plant was first proposed to meet the water demands of industrial facilities that wanted to build around Corpus Christi, a refinery hub on the South Texas coast. But its cost ballooned from initial estimates of $160 million in 2019 to $1.2 billion last month.
 

Beebo Brink

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An Annual Blast of Pacific Cold Water Did Not Occur, Alarming Scientists - The New York Times
Each year between January and April, a blob of cold water rises from the depths of the Gulf of Panama to the surface, playing an essential role in supporting marine life in the region. But this year, it never arrived.

The blob is as much as 10 degrees Celsius, or 18 degrees Fahrenheit, colder than the surface water. It is also rich in nutrients from decomposing matter that falls to the ocean floor, providing food for local fisheries and wildlife.

Dr. Schiebel was one of the scientists who recently documented the lack of this yearly upwelling in a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and identified a likely culprit: The lack of strong trade winds, which typically blow across Panama and kick off the dry season in January.
 

Beebo Brink

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An Arctic Researcher Explains Yedoma, the Permafrost Keeping the Planet Livable - Inside Climate News
Permafrost is very special in that it contains more than twice as much carbon than has ever been released by all human sources; people are not aware that it’s a frozen foundation that this current society and civilization is built on. People are not aware that every person on Earth depends on permafrost storing vast amounts of carbon. Everybody on Earth is dependent on the boreal forest shielding this permafrost from thawing.... We sometimes hear permafrost referred to as a “carbon bomb” because of all the carbon dioxide and methane that it could potentially emit as it thaws.
 
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Beebo Brink

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Khamon

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as homeowners scramble to try to find insurance they can afford
or can get at all. Our company covered tornado repair costs at almost twice the premiums we'd paid over nearly thirty years. Then they promptly ended coverage in Southeastern states due to the vast number of weather-related claims they were having to pay. They are not the first, and will not be the last, company to vacate this area of the country as hurricane, tornado, and straight line wind damage continue to increase in strength and frequency.

We now pay a slightly lower rate, with similar coverage, but noticeably higher deductibles. I wonder how long they'll last. It's not a good feeling.
 

Cindy Claveau

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Experts fired by Trump revive popular climate website


US President Donald Trump is an avowed climate science skeptic who during his second term has followed through on promises to slash funding for renewable energies like wind, and to promote oil and gas.

But the administration has also gutted agencies that produce climate information used by millions of Americans. In February, only weeks after taking office, around 800 people were dismissed from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which monitors ocean and climate conditions and issues weather forecasts and warnings via its National Weather Service.

The firings also impacted the agency's climate.gov website, the premier platform for climate information in the US that informs readers about extreme weather, sea level and temperature rise, and much else. It had around 15 million page views in 2024, noted the AFP news agency.
 

Beebo Brink

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Isabeau

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In April this year, China installed more solar power than Australia has in all its history. In one month.

This isn’t a story about Australia’s poor track record on solar; Australia is a global leader. Rather, this shows the astonishing rate at which China is embracing renewable technologies across every aspect of its society.

But don’t make the mistake of thinking this transformation is driven by a moral obligation to act on climate change.

China’s reasons for this are less about arresting rising temperatures than its desire to stop relying on imported fossil fuels and to fix the pollution caused by them.
 

Innula Zenovka

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Evernote Link

“What this whole debate comes down to is who controls the skies,” Republican representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia told the audience at a House Oversight Committee hearing on Tuesday. “Do we believe in God and that he has dominion over his perfect creation of planet Earth? Do we believe that he has given us everything we need to survive as a civilization since the beginning of time? Or do you believe in man’s claim of authority over the weather, based on scientists that have only been alive for decades and weren’t here to witness the climate changes since the beginning of time?”
Well, since she puts it like that ...
 

Free

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So, are we limited to starting her analysis from THE BEGINNING OF TIME?
 
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Innula Zenovka

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Guardian ‘I couldn’t look’: European farmers on losing crops as the industry collides with worsening drought

The food system is the most vulnerable. Lilian Guzmán, a farmer just outside Berlin, said the drought had led to a “total failure” of her rapeseed crop and left her and her employees wishing for rain as the harvest edged closer.

“It was a huge stress,” said Guzmán, who like Goebel has sandy soils that struggle to hold water. “We were watching from the window like children waiting for the first snow.”

Adam Beer, an organic farmer in south-west England, said he hadn’t seen proper rain for months when he planted cabbages and cauliflowers in the wake of the heatwave that scorched Europe in early July. He made sure to irrigate his field once before and twice after placing the four-inch shoots in the frail soil.
But within a week, he said, the young green plants had turned “either completely invisible, or so dry you could crumble them into dust.”

Beer had expected to lose half the crop to the hot and dry weather but instead found 95% had been wiped out. “Your heart just drops,” he said. “It’s devastating.”
From the UK, which saw its driest spring in over a century, all the way through to Ukraine, a breadbasket facing desertification, the lack of water has also caused pain across lesser-known parts of the European economy.

“It is indeed stressful,” said Martin Staats, president of the German inland shipping association. Low water levels were restricting movement and stopping companies from loading their ships full of cargo, he said. In the driest periods, ships have been forced to sit idly in harbours.