Friday 19th of April 2024

meanwhile as humans panic about covid19 and the air is breathable again...

pigsAirplanes are grounded. Roads, deserted. The skies are clear and fish swim once again in Venice’s canals. Covid-19 has achieved in three short months what Greta Thunberg and her ilk could only dream of. Will it last?

Spreading exponentially throughout the world since originating in the Chinese province of Hubei before Christmas, the Covid-19 coronavirus has claimed more than 8,000 lives and infected more than 204,000 people globally. Governments struggling to contain the rampaging virus have closed their borders, restricted social gatherings, and shuttered non-essential stores and businesses, in an unprecedented crackdown that British researchers say may last up to 18 months. 

Remember Greta Thunberg? Before Covid-19 threatened to wipe us all out, climate change was the apocalyptic story of the last few years. Thunberg spent the guts of the last two years shouting at our leaders to avert the coming “mass extinction,” as her followers took to the streets to demand the state outlaw cars, meat, air travel and even our beloved pet cats and dogs. “Go vegan or die,” they said, warning us that we have but 12 years to change our ways or perish in the coming eco-holocaust.

That’s the line they pushed, and the mass media dutifully repeated it. But climate hysteria has been relegated to the back pages by coverage of Covid-19. Thunberg and her devotees can find some silver linings though: not only does she not have to return to school (nice timing, G), but the virus has helped Mother Earth recover in ways that screaming, crying, and gluing themselves to trains never could.

Doing Greta’s work

In Wuhan – the epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic – the streets are deserted and industry has been shut down. The corresponding drop in air pollution has been dramatic. One Stanford University researcher calculated that the improved air quality may end up saving 20 times as many lives as were taken by the virus. Satellite photographs from NASA show just how pronounced the drop-off has been:

China as a whole has seen its carbon dioxide emissions drop by a quarter in February alone.

Worldwide, at least 24 airlines are suspending operations completely. In a snapshot taken by FlightRadar 24 on Monday, 500 fewer planes were in the sky over Europe than on the same day a year ago. Quarantine measures and closed borders mean the downward trend will continue, according to FR24. Commercial aviation accounts for two percent of all global carbon dioxide emissions, meaning that even a 50 percent drop in air traffic would be equivalent to the entire CO2 output of Mexico.

Demand for oil has fallen, and fewer automobiles clog the streets of even famously gridlocked American cities like Seattle and San Francisco. But perhaps the most noticeable change is visible in Venice, where harsh lockdown measures have kept the normal throngs of tourists away. The city’s once-murky canals are now clear, and Venetians have spotted fish swimming in the waterways.

All of this is exactly what Thunberg wanted, albeit under different circumstances. A world without car and air travel is implicitly proscribed by Thunberg, and explicitly written out in the ‘Green New Deal’ – an ambitious piece of climate legislation pushed by the youth-led Sunrise Movement in the US and sponsored by more than 100 members of Congress. The Green New Deal also calls for the dismantling of all polluting industry and commerce, and would grant the government power to decide what you eat, how you build your home and how you travel.

Changing your habits by force

Few will quibble with travel restrictions during a pandemic, and people will accept some lifestyle changes. But would we accept a life of isolation and deprivation as the ‘new normal’, all in the name of saving the planet?

Like hell we would. Even with a modern-day plague at our doorsteps, governments around the world have had to physically force people to remain at home. Hazmat-suited guards kept Chinese citizens in their apartments during the peak of the crisis in Wuhan. Italy has taken to fining or jailing citizens who break their quarantine. Spain and France have also fined their citizenry for breaking isolation rules, and deployed police to herd tourists away from popular spots.

In Ireland, revellers threw common sense to the wind and danced Sunday night away in the only pub in Dublin opting not to voluntarily close. In France, looting and fighting has been reported. The point is that even with the lives of their families at stake, people will still attempt to defy the advice of their leaders.

And so it would go in the green utopia envisioned by Thunberg and friends. Even with the growth of “flight shaming,”people will still take to the skies, unless forced not to. People will drive until their cold, dead hands are pried from the steering wheel. Despite the best efforts of the liberal media to shame readers into literally confessing their “climate sins,”people will still choose to live a life of modern convenience over a life of self-imposed eco-asceticism.

When the coronavirus is eventually controlled, governments will hand out massive cash bailouts to get the world economy back on its feet. US President Donald Trump promised a trillion dollar stimulus package on Tuesday, including $50 billion to the airline industry.

But once things are back to normal, the environmental debate will likely start anew. This time, the Greta Thunbergs of the world can point to the current, virus-induced environmental uptick as proof that we can – when push comes to shove – give up our carbon addiction. However, remember that if your leaders are serious about meeting the climate goals they promise to, the lifestyle changes they ask of you will need to be enforced with the machinery of the state. 

In ‘Discipline and Punish’, postmodern theorist Michel Foucault noted that in the Middle Ages, the bubonic plague could only be controlled by “omnipresent and omniscient” surveillance, coupled with draconian punishment for those who violate the lockdown. Foucault called the plague a “political dream,” which gave the powerful justification to regulate the “smallest details of everyday life.”

State-enforced travel bans and mandatory isolation are extreme measures for a desperate time. Don’t let the environmental crusaders make them a blueprint for the future.

And while you’re at it, ask Greta whether the current drop in emissions has pushed back that ‘12 years to doom’ prediction we heard so much about.

 

Read more:

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/483438-greta-thunberg-coronavirus-climate/

 

Unfortunately, despite all the accidental cuts in emissions of warming gases due to a "nasty" virus, humans are silly enough to start again pollutioning this lovely space we call Earth... But there is already enough stuff up there in the atmosphere to carry on warming till 2200 (say 2199.5 to be more specific with a virus added to the equation)... The point of Greta Thunberg and the kids has been to prevent further warming beyond what is going to be... But, because our arse isn't on fire yet, we're not going to panic about it, will we?...

still needed...

The immensity of Australia’s 2019/20 summer of bushfires shows us that climate change is here now. Directly and indirectly, people in Australia and around the world are feeling the hurt that these extreme weather events, unprecedented in size, intensity and impact, are causing.

And you might be wondering what you can do to help. We’ve included some tips and links to helpful Climate Council resources below. We’ve also included 5 things you can do to focus the national conversation on climate action.

In the immediate aftermath of this bushfire crisis, millions of Australians are stepping up and contributing in countless ways, from providing water and food for people in affected communities, to sewing pouches for kangaroo joeys, to donating money to the recovery effort.

 

Read more:

https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/bushfire-crisis-5-ways-you-can-help/

out of the headlines, but still problematic...

Europe's hot summer weather could worsen the effects of COVID-19

The coronavirus has pushed climate change out of the headlines. But as summer approaches, experts say record temperatures and drought could compound problems created by the virus.

Unseasonably warm temperatures, blue skies and gardens in full bloom — most of Europe is currently enjoying dreamy spring weather. But that's not how farmers see it. They are hoping for rain, and fear that without it their crops will suffer greatly. And experts say there is a very real prospect that beyond the continuing coronavirus pandemic, Europe could be facing weather-induced crop failures in the very near future.

Right now, there is little talk of that threat as farmers are more concerned with an acute lack of seasonal harvesters from abroad. The labor shortage is the direct result of travel bans put in place in an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19. Quarantine-related stories like this one have dominated headlines for weeks, leaving no space for the climate change stories they replaced — stories about massive forest fires raging across Australia and Brazil, for instance.

Global warming hasn't gone away

"January was too warm. There is no evidence that global warming has paused or slowed," says Andreas Becker of the German Weather Service (DWD) in Frankfurt am Main. Moreover, he says, January and March were far too dry and February too wet. Water levels in Germany's largest river, the Rhine, were more than 6 meters (20 feet) above average in early March, though they are now falling once again. Currently, the Rhine is close to its average depth of 3.5 meters, but water levels are continuing to drop.

Meteorologist Becker says the good thing about having such a wet February is that it helped offset some of the groundwater loss that occurred over the past two years as temperatures soared above 40℃ (104℉). He says plants, which draw water from the top 20-50 centimeters (8-20 inches) of soil, have been doing better than trees, which draw theirs from depths closer to two meters. Becker says there is very little water remaining at those levels.

 

Read more:

https://www.dw.com/en/europes-hot-summer-weather-could-worsen-the-effect...

 

 

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april record heat in perth...

Perth has sweltered through its warmest April day on record, with police continuing to warn beachgoers about the importance of social distancing to limit the spread of coronavirus.

Key points:
  • The BOM said the temperature was "fairly unusual" this late in the year
  • Police have been patrolling beaches enforcing social distancing rules
  • WA has recorded eight new cases of COVID-19, taking its total to 514

 

The temperature reached 39.5 degrees Celsius just before 2:00pm, breaking the previous record of 37.6C set on April 9, 1910.

Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) duty forecaster Max Strack said warmer weather in the state's north-western Gascoyne region had been pushed south by a trough off the west coast.

"It's a pattern that we typically see during the summer, so it's fairly unusual to have it this late in the year," she said.

There were concerns the hot weather would see police forced to close beaches, and police have been out in force this weekend enforcing social distancing guidelines.

 

Read more:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04-11/perth-records-hottest-april-day-e...

 

 

Meanwhile the perth Sculpture by the Sea has just finished... There was a sculpture that attracted Gus's eyes:

bythesea

Picture from the organisers... Scary, hey?

 

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