Beyond Catastrophe A New Climate Reality Is Coming Into View By David Wallace-Wells
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/26/magazine/climate-change-warming-world.html
You can never really see the future, only imagine it, then try to make sense of the new world when it arrives.
Just a few years ago, climate projections for this century looked quite apocalyptic, with most scientists warning that continuing “business as usual” would bring the world four or even five degrees Celsius of warming — a change disruptive enough to call forth not only predictions of food crises and heat stress, state conflict and economic strife, but, from some corners, warnings of civilizational collapse and even a sort of human endgame. (Perhaps you’ve had nightmares about each of these and seen premonitions of them in your newsfeed.)
Now, with the world already 1.2 degrees hotter, scientists believe that warming this century will most likely fall between two or three degrees. (A United Nations report released this week ahead of the COP27 climate conference in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, confirmed that range….)
This NYT article is awful in many ways. On the one hand, emissions have not dropped. On the other hand, we can thank human responsiveness for the reduction in predicted temperatures. Duh. But the bottom line is that the climate won’t heat up enough to destroy humanity.
Here is a quote from another NYT article on climate published the same day.
Without drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, the report said, the planet is on track to warm by an average of 2.1 to 2.9 degrees Celsius, compared with preindustrial levels, by 2100.
Did you catch that? Compared to preindustrial levels—using a baseline from 150-200 years ago? Is this a CYA because they expect little to no warming for the next few decades?
Then the article repeats the usual climate hyperbole, in spades:
With each fraction of a degree of warming, tens of millions more people worldwide would be exposed to life-threatening heat waves, food and water scarcity, and coastal flooding while millions more mammals, insects, birds and plants would disappear.
Hedging their bets? Editors not all getting the same memo? Is the NYT trying to get in front of major battles at the climate conference? Get in front of rapid cooling?
Or is it an admission that countries are no longer willing to shoot their populations in the head with fossil fuel restrictions; are the apparatchiks seeing pitchforks?
This is just a heads-up that the climate narrative is changing in real time. Let’s see where this goes—but watch what comes out of the UN climate conference.
The climate scaremongering stinks as bad as the pandemic fear mongering. There is no climate emergency, there never was a climate emergency and there will not be a climate emergency caused by anthropogenic C02.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7P4zyxM8zc
Read the recent published peer reviewed paper on Extreme Trends such as Hurricanes, Tornadoes, Precipitation, Floods and Droughts.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1140/epjp/s13360-021-02243-9
"In conclusion on the basis of observational data, the climate crisis that, according to many sources, we are experiencing today, is not evident yet."
The thing that confuses me about this climate change fuss is the seemingly tunnel visioned response to carbon neutrality and emissions.
What about other industrial pollutants and the knock on effects of say, pesticides, herbicides and heavy metals? Or plastics and micro-plastics? How do those effect the ecosystem both macro scale and micro and how do those effect greenhouse gasses?
What about the economic and business policies like planned obsolescence and the push for constant commercialism. Buy it, break it, throw it away and buy another one and so on. Isn't that wasteful and damaging?
Or globalism and the cumulative effects on the supply chain. I saw a label on my pork chops saying it came from Sweden. There are pig farms 10 miles down the road. Why is my pork coming from Europe? Think about the process of getting it from farm. To factory. To storage. To freighting. To the next wholesaler. To the supermarket to my table. And all the energy and emissions along that supply chain. Why not simplify it and shorten it?
It was global warming. Then it was cooling. Now it's just changing.