And the winner at Cop26 is… the fossil fuel industry – cartoon https://t.co/zMwL6llvgQ
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) November 13, 2021
I have been surly this week, as you may have noticed, and the pending demise of all Terran species by our hand is the biggest reason.
Oh, I won't live to see it. But your children, grandchildren, great grands, and my nieces and nephews and their children surely will. And it's going to be bad, and it's coming sooner than anyone thinks.
The area deforested in Brazil’s Amazon region reached a 15-year record after a 22% increase from the prior year.
— The Associated Press (@AP) November 19, 2021
“It is a shame. It is a crime,” said Márcio Astrini, executive secretary of a network of environmental nonprofit groups. https://t.co/2iB7mMuaFO
Some say COP26 made no real decisions. It did. It decided to destroy the Maldives, Tuvalu, Kiribas and other nations for the sake of coal and oil. It decided to wreck our grandkids future so some greedy shareholders could live in luxury. Those are big decisions.
— 💧Julian Cribb (@JulianCribb) November 13, 2021
A California state agency recently warned that infrastructure planners along the coastline should expect up to 10 feet of sea-level rise by the end of the century. https://t.co/h4BNH8s6hg
— grist (@grist) November 19, 2021
"To envision just how much ice the planet has lost, and how it is indelibly altering our planet, consider this: melt on the poles in just the past few decades has changed the planet’s rotational axis," writes @PorterFox https://t.co/4WhDxG2SrL
— TIME (@TIME) November 13, 2021
In the last 40 years, the 77 degree isotherm in the Gulf of Mexico has migrated 120 miles north - 30 miles per decade. That has implications for strength of hurricanes, moisture availability for storms, algae blooms and marine species movement, to name a few. https://t.co/xUA3bhfjcy
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) November 16, 2021
More on down the post on who's to blame (basically all of us) and what can be done at this point (pick your poison). We've been building to this moment all my life and long before, essentially ever since we started burning coal and then petroleum to light and heat our homes, then our offices, and move ourselves and our commerce around.
60 years of #ClimateChange warnings: the signs that were missed (& ignored):
— Dawn Rose Turner (@DawnRoseTurner) November 15, 2021
Effects of ‘#WeirdWeather’ were already being felt in the 1960s, but scientists linking #FossilFuels with climate change were dismissed as prophets of doom | @guardian https://t.co/X1OItH5ipF
But the people we elected to be watchdogs took payoffs to look the other way while the wealthy got ever more greedy. Thus it has always been with capitalism, sadly.
Politicians and their corporate masters decided, without our consent, that economic growth and wealth are more important than the planet.
— Lawrence loves nature (@endhunting) November 14, 2021
They had their chance, failed, and made themselves irrelevant.
My thoughts on COP26 and how we take back our planet:https://t.co/zQTBWR11OT
This tweet is not just a tweet. This tweet is a death sentence for your children one day. This sale, the million acre Alaska sale—if you still say Biden is mitigating climate change you are not a rube. You are a collaborator. https://t.co/6Ys7GCCS3y
— Susan of Texas (@SusanofTexas) November 13, 2021
In case you missed it:
“The Department of the Interior will offer up more than 80 million acres—an area larger than the state of New Mexico—of the Gulf of Mexico for drilling. It is bigger than any lease sale conducted under President Donald Trump…” https://t.co/RFOMqbcvJe
— David Wallace-Wells (@dwallacewells) November 14, 2021
— 🌻TurboKitty🌻 (@TurboKitty) November 19, 2021
Slightly longer marinating reported #COP26 piece from me, on how the American way of life is still not really up for negotiation, despite all the flashy pledges meant to suggest otherwise https://t.co/9PElxSxxrR
— Kate Aronoff (@KateAronoff) November 16, 2021
World governments spend about $423 billion every year to subsidize oil, gas and coal = 400% of the amount needed to help poor countries address climate change#insanity #ClimateCrisis https://t.co/REJS5Dd1Jd
— Green News Report (@GreenNewsReport) November 13, 2021
ummm... the fossil gas industry, in an official submission to the united nations framework convention on climate change, has just described *hydrocarbons* as a victim of cancel culture https://t.co/sIc1JiWl4R
— Ajit Niranjan (@NiranjanAjit) November 17, 2021
Here's a good question: which oil company do you think is the worst?
.@paulpaz of @amazonwatch has worked tirelessly for years to expose @Chevron's crimes in the Amazon. Watch this remarkable highlight from the DC rally where he holds up a contaminated sample for all at the Capitol to see.
— Steven Donziger (@SDonziger) November 4, 2021
"They are the poster child for the worst oil company" pic.twitter.com/2eofxy61db
"Exxon tells 5th Circuit that SCOTUS ruling voids $14 million award from pollution violations at Texas facility"
"Toyota Named Third Most Obstructive Company Towards Climate Change After ExxonMobil, Chevron"
I spared Royal Dutch Kuffner (wait; I can't call him that anymore. From now on he's just plain old Shelly) as much grief as I could. His company, after all, talks like it's trying to do the right thing. In the words of Master Jedi Yoda; "Do or do not. There is no 'try' ".
And we are all well aware that Texas isn't going to be the leader in this effort. Quite the opposite.
"Oil production at Permian Basin set to hit new record"
Methane leaking from old wells. Plastics filling the oceans. Micro-pieces of plastic in our bodies. PFAS in our drinking water. Mountains of "fast fashion" piled high in the Chilean desert. Big banks like Chase funding pipeline projects like Line 3 in the face of the most civil of disobedience. The slow death of the planet, and us, is everywhere you look.
No wonder people are suffering from 'climate depression' and quitting their shitty minimum wage jobs.
With a couple of local takes ...
Hope Osborn at Texas 2036 looks ahead to the day when Texas is no longer reliant on oil and gas taxes to fund public schools. (Might be pretty far down the list of things to worry about, since public schools, and/or the roads to get to them, will be flooded in a few years. I'm guessing home schooling gets to be a bigger thing as more Republicans clamor for their tax cuts, too.) David Collins seems to be feeling a little down, having been affected by the AstroworldFest tragedy and Glasgow. Socratic Gadfly blogged about the latest in Texas-New Mexico water rights issues and other environment and climate news, and his thoughts on Glasgow COP26 were ... well, about as angry as mine.
It's time -- waaaay past time -- to rethink everything.
Let’s not be complicit in the lie that survival through reform is possible. If the very worst of climate breakdown is to be averted, then we need a complete overhaul of the global neoliberal economic system.https://t.co/vTM3ukB7zy
— Rupert Read 🌍 (@GreenRupertRead) November 14, 2021
A reminder: the people in power don’t need conferences, treaties or agreements to start taking real climate action. They can start today.
— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) November 15, 2021
When enough people come together then change will come and we can achieve almost anything. So instead of looking for hope - start creating it.
Get engaged, says @blkahn. Talk about #climate with friends. Call your senators & reps. Elect more climate champions. Get your city to ban new gas hookups & incentivize heat pumps. Do anything & everything you can. Because the world depends on it. https://t.co/ToaGJ9RwH1
— Susan Hassol, Climate Communication (@ClimateComms) November 18, 2021
I'm also going to start voting like the people I love's lives depend on it. And not like Barack Obama meant it, either.
Whats comical is accepting the Duopoly & its established game as the only way "it works". Whats comical is thinking this still when over 60% of Americans prefer a 3rd party. pic.twitter.com/mueUpieXSQ
— Ernest L. Peña 🌻 (Salaam Ali) (@SalaamEfendi) November 12, 2021