Monday, October 21, 2024

OMNI CLIMATE MEMO MONDAYS #201, OCTOBER 21, 2024.

 

OMNI CLIMATE MEMO MONDAYS #201, OCTOBER 21, 2024.  Compiled by Dick Bennett

Sueellen Campbell.  Where Do the Candidates Stand on CC?
Nicholas Kusnetz.  Vote to save the
Inflation Reduction Act.
Book:  Carton and Malm.  Overshoot (the 1.5 limit).
Greenpeace.  A
massive drawdown in fossil fuel production and usage is urgently needed.
New Books from Climate and Capitalism.

 

 “Where do the candidates stand on climate change?”  by SueEllen Campbell, October 16, 2024.  Yale Climate Connections.

These articles will get you up to speed as you prepare to cast your vote in U.S. elections for president, Senate, House, and other races.

https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2024/10/where-do-the-candidates-stand-on-climate-change/?utm_source=Weekly+News+from+Yale+Climate+Connections&utm_campaign=68954a4fb5-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_10_11_06_16&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-68954a4fb5-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D


Election Throws Uncertainty Onto Biden’s Signature Climate LawBy Nicholas Kusnetz.   Inside Climate News. 
President Joe Biden’s signature climate change law, the Inflation Reduction Act,  passed Congress by the narrowest of margins, without a single Republican in favor. GOP leaders have attacked the bill and promised to repeal it.    Read the full story  
Inside Climate News is covering what’s at stake for the climate throughout this election season.  Sign up.

The following article by Wim Carton and Andreas Malm is drawn from their book, Overshoot: How the World Surrendered to Climate Breakdown.   2024. 
“Overshoot-and-return: A dangerous climate change illusion.”  Climate and Capitalism (October 14, 2024).
“BURY THE FANTASY!  HOW MAINSTREAM CLIMATE SCIENCE ENDORSED THE FANTASY OF A GLOBAL WARMING TIME MACHINE.”
Once the 1.5°C limit is passed, there will be no going back. . . .  MORE  click on title.  Top of Form

Here is the conclusion:  
By conjuring up the fantasy of overshoot-and-return, scientists invented a mechanism for delaying climate action and unwittingly lent credibility to those (and they are many) who have no real interest in reigning in emissions here and now; who will seize on any excuse to keep the oil and gas and coal flowing just a little longer.

The findings of this new paper make it perfectly clear: There is no time machine waiting in the wings. Once 1.5°C lies behind us, we must consider that threshold permanently broken.  There then remains only one road to ambitious mitigation of climate change, and no amount of carbon dioxide removal can absolve us of its inconvenient political implications.  Avoiding climate breakdown demands that we bury the fantasy of overshoot-and-return and with it another illusion as well: that the Paris targets can be met without uprooting the status-quo. One limit after the other will be broken unless we manage to strand fossil fuel assets and curtail opportunities for continuing to profit from oil and gas and coal.

We will not mitigate climate change without confronting and defeating fossil fuel interests. We should expect climate scientists to be candid about this.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

Greenpeace

 

      Dick, Did you see my email about our upcoming livestream? [This livestreaming has passed, but its announcement speaks loudly alongside Carton and Malm.]

From: Destiny, Greenpeace USA, “Permit to Kill — A Live Conversation.”

 Destiny: Hurricane Helene. Hurricane Milton. Devastating and destructive flooding in Nepal.  Our reality is bleak but certain — the world is currently embroiled in climate chaos. While there is no avoiding climate change, the scientific community has been nothing but clear: a massive drawdown in fossil fuel production and usage is bold, drastic, and necessary to stem the worst impacts of climate disasters.   

Amid this climate chaos, the U.S. Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) industry is attempting to scale up at a troublingly fast pace. The recent report Permit to Kill1, a collaborative research effort of Greenpeace USA and Sierra Club, explores the public health impacts and implications of LNG expansion for communities in close proximity and beyond.

 

New Books from Sept. and Oct. Climate and Capitalism

Andrew Greenfield.  LIFEHOUSE:  Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire.  Verso.
Drawing lessons Black Panther survival programs, the Occupy Sandy disaster-relief effort and solidarity networks of crisis-era Greece, as well as autonomous Rojava, Greenfield argues that mutual care and local power can help shelter us in a time of global catastrophes.

On Barak.  HEAT, A HISTORY: Lessons from the Middle East for a Warming Planet.
University of California P.
Despite record-breaking temperatures, most people fail to fully grasp the gravity of global heating. Using examples from the hottest places on earth, Barak shows how we have become desensitized, and charts a way out of short-term thinking, towards meaningful action.

Hans A. Baer and Merrill Singer.  BUILDING THE CRITICAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF CLIMATE CHANGE:  Towards a Socio-Ecological Revolution.  Routledge.
Baer and Singer open a dialog with contending perspectives in the anthropology of climate change, including the perspectives of elite polluters and the all-too-often regrettable contributions of anthropologists and other scholars. They aim to lay the foundation for a brave new sustainable world that is socially just, highly democratic, and climatically safe for humans and other species.

 Olivier de Schutter.  THE POVERTY OF GROWTH.  Pluto Press
The quest for growth not only undermines planetary sustainability, it erodes human rights, widens inequality, and modernizes poverty without eliminating it. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights calls for a new path in which progress is no longer focused on wealth and profit.

Arturo Casadevall.  WHAT IF FUNGI WIN?  John Hopkins UP.
While pharmaceutical researchers focus on bacteria and viruses, fungal pathogens may produce the next global outbreaks, pandemics for which no vaccine and few medications exist. Global warming is forcing fungi to evolve, and in the process making them more dangerous to bats, amphibians, and food crops — and to immunocompromised humans.

 

[People ask me:  what can I do, I’m just one person?  The preceded short reports and of course the books contain dozens of needed actions.  And try to do them with another person.  Time, the most precious commodity in a warming world, hurries on.]

END OMNI CLIMATE MEMO MONDAYS #201, OCTOBER 21, 2024.  Compiled by Dick Bennett

 

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