• About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
TodayHeadline
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • POLITICS
  • FINANCE
  • ENTERPRISE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • HEALTH
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • AUTOMOTIVE
    • SPORTS
  • LISTING
    • ALL LISITING
    • ADD NEW
    • LISTING CATEGORIES
    • LOGIN AND REGISTER
    • DASHBOARD
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • POLITICS
  • FINANCE
  • ENTERPRISE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • HEALTH
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • AUTOMOTIVE
    • SPORTS
  • LISTING
    • ALL LISITING
    • ADD NEW
    • LISTING CATEGORIES
    • LOGIN AND REGISTER
    • DASHBOARD
No Result
View All Result
TodayHeadline
No Result
View All Result
Home Technology

‘Massive-scale mobilization’ necessary for addressing climate change, scientists say

January 7, 2021
in Technology
0
‘Massive-scale mobilization’ necessary for addressing climate change, scientists say
0
SHARES
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


A year after a global coalition of more than 11,000 scientists declared a climate emergency, Oregon State University researchers who initiated the declaration released an update today that points to a handful of hopeful signs, but shares continued alarm regarding an overall lack of progress in addressing climate risks.

“Young people in more than 3,500 locations around the world have organized to push for urgent action,” said Oregon State University’s William Ripple, who co-authored “The Climate Emergency: 2020 in Review,” published today in Scientific American. “And the Black Lives Matter movement has elevated social injustice and equality to the top of our consciousness.

“Rapid progress in each of the climate action steps we outline is possible if framed from the outset in the context of climate justice – climate change is a deeply moral issue. We desperately need those who face the most severe climate risks to help shape the response.”

One year ago, Ripple, distinguished professor of ecology in the OSU College of Forestry, and Christopher Wolf, a postdoctoral scholar at OSU, co-authored a paper published in BioScience in which more than 11,000 scientists from 153 nations declared a climate emergency. They presented graphics showing trends as vital signs to measure progress and provided a set of mitigation strategies.

Ripple and Wolf teamed up with scientists from Tufts University, the University of Sydney and the University of Cape Town on the Scientific American review, which reports pockets of progress while renewing calls for immediate, widespread action – including a declaration of a climate emergency by the United States and funding for mitigation.

“The climate emergency is here and accelerating more rapidly than most scientists anticipated,” Wolf said. “People are frightened – an illustration of that is the more than 1,800 climate emergency declarations issued around the world, by jurisdictions encompassing more than 820 million people.”

The scientists continue to point to six areas in which humanity should take immediate steps to slow down the effects of a warming planet:

  1. Energy. Implement massive conservation practices; transition from fossil fuels to low-carbon renewables including solar and wind power; eliminate subsidies to fossil fuel companies; and impose carbon fees that are high enough to curtail the use of fossil fuels.
  2. Short–lived pollutants. Swiftly cut emissions of methane, soot, hydrofluorocarbons and other short-lived climate pollutants. Doing so has the potential to reduce the short-term warming trend by more than 50% over the next few decades.
  3. Nature. Restore and protect ecosystems such as forests, grasslands, peatlands, wetlands and mangroves, and allow a larger share of these ecosystems to reach their ecological potential for sequestering atmospheric carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas.
  4. Food. Eat more plants and consume fewer animal products. This dietary shift would significantly reduce emissions of methane and other greenhouse gases and free up agricultural lands for growing human food rather than livestock feed. Reducing food waste is also critical – the scientists say at least one-third of all food produced ends up as garbage.
  5. Economy. Convert the economy to one that is carbon free to address human dependence on the biosphere and shift goals away from the growth of gross domestic product at any cost. Curb exploitation of ecosystems for profit to maintain long-term biosphere sustainability.
  6. Population. Stabilize a global human population that is increasing by more than 200,000 people a day, using approaches that ensure social and economic justice such as guaranteeing education for young women and the availability of voluntary family planning services.

“The adverse effects of climate change are much worse than had been expected and now threaten both the biosphere and humanity,” Ripple said. “The year 2020, one of the hottest years on record, also saw extraordinary fire activity in the western United States and Australia, a Siberian heat wave with record high temperatures exceeding 100 degrees within the Arctic circle, an Atlantic hurricane season resulting in more than $46 billion in damages, and deadly floods and landslides in South Asia that displaced more than 12 million people.”

The year wasn’t without climate action positives, the scientists note. Among them:

“Lockdowns associated with the pandemic resulted in a decrease in CO2 emissions of 7% in 2020 but this reduction is probably not going to be long-lived because there has been no major concurrent shift in the way we produce energy,” Ripple said. “This drop in emissions is a tiny blip compared to the overall buildup of greenhouse gases, which has resulted in all five of the hottest years on record occurring since 2015.”

The scientists note that no major industrialized country is on track to achieve the Paris Agreement target of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

“We’re at the point of needing a massive-scale mobilization to address the climate crisis,” Wolf said.

“A year ago, we were worried about poor progress on mitigating climate change. Now we are alarmed by the failure of sufficient progress in 2020. But aggressive, transformative change, framed against the backdrop of social justice, can ignite an enormous deployment that will let us avert the worst of the climate emergency.”



Source link

Previous Post

Iceland launches new footlong vegan sausage roll alongside Greggs options

Next Post

3 day lockdown, masks for Brisbane

Next Post
3 day lockdown, masks for Brisbane

3 day lockdown, masks for Brisbane

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Meet George Jetson? Orlando Unveils Plans for First Flying-Car Hub in U.S. – The New York Times

Meet George Jetson? Orlando Unveils Plans for First Flying-Car Hub in U.S. – The New York Times

November 12, 2020
Stunning porn star Mia Malkova strips off to unveil results of birthday boob job

Stunning porn star Mia Malkova strips off to unveil results of birthday boob job

August 18, 2020
Trisha Paytas Destroyed The Internet By Posting Her Toilet Paper Asshole

Trisha Paytas Destroyed The Internet By Posting Her Toilet Paper Asshole

October 6, 2020
Stunning surfer Ellie-Jean Coffey ‘strips nude’ on XXX-rated website to earn cash after leaving her cheating boyfriend

Stunning surfer Ellie-Jean Coffey ‘strips nude’ on XXX-rated website to earn cash after leaving her cheating boyfriend

September 21, 2020
China ‘using TikTok, Twitter and cyberattacks to target US election systems,’ says NSA Robert O’Brien

China ‘using TikTok, Twitter and cyberattacks to target US election systems,’ says NSA Robert O’Brien

3
PS4 update: Free PlayStation game upgrade is coming to PS5 | Gaming | Entertainment

PS4 update: Free PlayStation game upgrade is coming to PS5 | Gaming | Entertainment

2
SpaceX: We’ve launched 32,000 Linux computers into space for Starlink internet

SpaceX: We’ve launched 32,000 Linux computers into space for Starlink internet

2
PS5 pre-order latest is good news for PlayStation 5 fans waiting on price | Gaming | Entertainment

PS5 pre-order latest is good news for PlayStation 5 fans waiting on price | Gaming | Entertainment

2
Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

January 25, 2021

Biden to reinstate COVID-19 travel rules on non-U.S. travelers

January 25, 2021
RUTH SUNDERLAND: Heading for tech trouble?

RUTH SUNDERLAND: Heading for tech trouble?

January 25, 2021
Dan Levy, Regina King and John Krasinski to host ‘SNL’

Dan Levy, Regina King and John Krasinski to host ‘SNL’

January 25, 2021

Recent News

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

January 25, 2021

Biden to reinstate COVID-19 travel rules on non-U.S. travelers

January 25, 2021
RUTH SUNDERLAND: Heading for tech trouble?

RUTH SUNDERLAND: Heading for tech trouble?

January 25, 2021
Dan Levy, Regina King and John Krasinski to host ‘SNL’

Dan Levy, Regina King and John Krasinski to host ‘SNL’

January 25, 2021

About Us

Todayheadline the independent news and topics discovery
A home-grown and independent news and topic aggregation . displays breaking news linking to news websites all around the world.

Follow Us

Latest News

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

January 25, 2021

Biden to reinstate COVID-19 travel rules on non-U.S. travelers

January 25, 2021

Recent News

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

Model with ‘biggest butt on OnlyFans’ flaunts intimate tattoo in tiny bikini

January 25, 2021

Biden to reinstate COVID-19 travel rules on non-U.S. travelers

January 25, 2021
  • About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2019 All rights are reserved Todayheadline

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Add Listing
  • All Categories
  • Cart
  • Checkout
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie policy (EU)
  • Dashboard
  • Home
  • Listing
  • Login or Register
  • My account
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • shops

© 2019 All rights are reserved Todayheadline