I think it's really important to keep saying, that the problem isn't over population. The problem is people wanting luxury goods and a throwaway culture, and aeroplanes and a globalised world.
Yeah I forgot that one! In fact the whole industrialised farming can be terrible for the environment. As a vegetarian, I'm not sure what I count meat as.You count meat as a luxury good? Just curious, because that's the big sinner.
Yeah I forgot that one! In fact the whole industrialised farming can be terrible for the environment. As a vegetarian, I'm not sure what I count meat as.
But again, keeping the odd chicken isn't a problem. Industrialised meat production, is.
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https://www.skepticalscience.com/how-much-meat-contribute-to-gw.html
No idea how correct that is, but we will roll with it.
I think it's really important to keep saying, that the problem isn't over population. The problem is people wanting luxury goods and a throwaway culture, and aeroplanes and a globalised world.
Indeed. But also, the problem isn't just that people have microwaves and tv's and flat screens... is that these are made half way across the world with little regard for the environment. If these were made in the UK, they would be made in far less environmentally damaging ways (because we don't want to spoil our own home!) That may sound slightly racist, but it should have some truth in it.Obviously I'm talking about industrialised consumption. If we all relied on the odd local farmer to have a steak every now and again, rather than meat being on the menu every day for virtually everyone, then it'd be an entirely different picture.
I'm not sure about the maths when it comes to the CO2 footprint, but even if you scale back throwaway culture and luxury, and airplane travel, you still can't exactly sustain 7,5 billion with anything like the footprint of a westerner. Most of the world have a far lower carbon footprint than the minorities in the developed world. How many people do you know who'd do away with their flatscreen, smart phone, laptop, gaming system, heating and air-conditioning, etc., and scale it back to the standards found in developing countries? Not a lot, whereas the developing world is quickly trying to get a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.
We clearly could do with halting population growth.
It is. But people like to pretend that global warming is someone elses problem.Surely it's both of those things?
Surely it's both of those things?
Population will probably cap out around 12-14 billion people. If there are any further increases, it won't be because of parents have 7 children, it will be because people stop dying
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projections_of_population_growth![]()
Yes. We've already reached 70+ on a global level:Could 100 years old be the norm ?
And most developed nations are at 80+ (skewed at the lower end because loads of people die in countries with extreme poverty, poor healthcare, famine, etc. - which drags the figure down):Worldwide, the average life expectancy at birth was 71.5 years (68 years and 4 months for males and 72 years and 8 months for females) over the period 2010–2015 according to United Nations World Population Prospects 2015 Revision.
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Median life expectancy of 90-100 years in most developed countries is going to be inevitable by the end of the current century - and will likely plateau at that figure, unless there are significant advances in anti/reverse ageing technologies because better living conditions and healthcare (and even curing fatal diseases) will only take you so far:
It's remarkable just how huge of a source cow burps are for methane, not to mention the dead zones concentrated feeding operations create in seas (notoriously at the mouth of the Mississippi).Yeah I forgot that one! In fact the whole industrialised farming can be terrible for the environment. As a vegetarian, I'm not sure what I count meat as.
But again, keeping the odd chicken isn't a problem. Industrialised meat production, is.
![]()
https://www.skepticalscience.com/how-much-meat-contribute-to-gw.html
No idea how correct that is, but we will roll with it.
There were some parts of Italy where there was 50°c today. But hey, global warming doesn't exist!
Yeah I forgot that one! In fact the whole industrialised farming can be terrible for the environment. As a vegetarian, I'm not sure what I count meat as.
But again, keeping the odd chicken isn't a problem. Industrialised meat production, is.
https://www.skepticalscience.com/how-much-meat-contribute-to-gw.html
No idea how correct that is, but we will roll with it.
Yep, just saw it on the BBC. I also read this morning the mediterranean sea is gonna be full of jellyfishes in few years.Was reading today that by year 2100, there gonna be places in South Asia and India that won't be suitable for humans to live there anymore.
Have those parts of Italy ever hit 50 previously?There were some parts of Italy where there was 50°c today. But hey, global warming doesn't exist!
They are in Southern Italy and Emilia Romagna. No, never, albeit you know it is always hot in Southern Italy.Have those parts of Italy ever hit 50 previously?
Yep, just saw it on the BBC. I also read this morning the mediterranean sea is gonna be full of jellyfishes in few years.
Yes. In the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum ~50 million years ago - before the Antarctic Glaciation phase.Have those parts of Italy ever hit 50 previously?
Ireland will get colder with climate change, not warmer. Along with most of Europe.It's not working in Ireland yet
Wish it would
NopeIreland will get colder with climate change, not warmer. Along with most of Europe.
Ireland will get colder with climate change, not warmer. Along with most of Europe.
Yep, just saw it on the BBC. I also read this morning the mediterranean sea is gonna be full of jellyfishes in few years.
Read that a sort of Great Barrier Reef might be seen in the mediterranean sea sooner or later, as this sea is getting hotter and hotter.The northern half of the GBR is on its last legs already with a huge percentage of coral bleached or dead.![]()
Eventually Europe will get colder because the gulf stream will no longer warm it like it does.Really?
While increased global temoeratures can cause more cloud cover which might slightly reduce temperature Ireland has experienced àt least 0.8 degrees rise in the last 100 years.
Eventually Europe will get colder because the gulf stream will no longer warm it like it does.
http://ocp.ldeo.columbia.edu/res/div/ocp/gs/A few times a year the British media of all stripes goes into a tizzy of panic when one climate scientist or another states that there is a possibility that the North Atlantic ocean circulation, of which the Gulf Stream is a major part, will slow down in coming years or even stop. Whether the scientists statements are measured or inflammatory the media invariably warns that this will plunge Britain and Europe into a new ice age, pictures of the icy shores of Labrador are shown, created film of English Channel ferries making their way through sea ice are broadcast... And so the circus continues year after year. Here is one example.
It is long time that the Gulf Stream-European climate myth was resigned to the graveyard of defunct misconceptions along with the Earth being flat and the sun going around the Earth. In its place we need serious assessments of how changes in ocean circulation will impact climate change and a new look at the problem of abrupt climate change that gives the tropical climate system and the atmosphere their due as the primary drivers of regional climates around the world.
http://blogs.ei.columbia.edu/2017/06/06/could-climate-change-shut-down-the-gulf-stream/According to Broecker, although reorganizations of ocean circulation are at the core of what happened in the past, we cannot say what the likelihood is that warming due to greenhouse gases will trigger yet another large and abrupt change. But if it were to occur, the consequences would be far less severe since, in the past, large existing expanses of sea ice were significant players in cooling the planet. “A conveyor shutdown is not likely,” said Broecker. “But if it happened, it would be ten times less dramatic and important than what happened during the glacial period when it caused a 10˚C temperature change.”
Eventually Europe will get colder because the gulf stream will no longer warm it like it does.
Eventually Europe will get colder because the gulf stream will no longer warm it like it does.
I'm not saying that Europe cooling is a good thing, in fact Europe cooling would be a very bad thing in certain parts where people already die yearly from the bitter winter. I'm not like that fecking flat earth nutter trying to deny or swing climate change.So eventually after we are all fecked by temoerature the gulf stream will beeak down causing further climate chaos. Great theory. I for one am reassured.
Again, everything you are saying is rubbishI'm not saying that Europe cooling is a good thing, in fact Europe cooling would be a very bad thing in certain parts where people already die yearly from the bitter winter. I'm not like that fecking flat earth nutter trying to deny or swing climate change.
Is it, or are you just ignorant? Nah, it's rubbish, I know.Again, everything you are saying is rubbish
Is it, or are you just ignorant? Nah, it's rubbish, I know.
Data from the UK Met Office Hadley Centre suggests there has been a slight cooling of surface temperatures since 2003