arthwollipot
Limerick Purist Pronouns: He/Him
Yes, that makes sense, especially in Australia where a car parked in the sun becomes an oven after half an hour. More places should do that.
Yes, that makes sense, especially in Australia where a car parked in the sun becomes an oven after half an hour. More places should do that.
Solar Program Updates
13 December 2019
We’re pleased to provide an update on the completion of the solar shaded car park project at the centre.
Construction has been completed and features over 430 new shaded spaces with a solar capacity of 1 megawatt (MW), which is in addition to the existing 1.3MW installed on the centre’s roof space.
Our solar shaded parking provides a new level in customer comfort through protection from the elements, especially in the hotter summer months and during wet weather.
Nearly 3,000 solar PV panels have been laid across the centre car park, ensuing customers can benefit from these improved facilities when they visit.
Back in 2019, too.
That is down from 64%, so...well done? Australia still has a staggeringly dirty economy, the only worse CO2 polluters being small petro-states, so don't get too carried away with the back slapping.Australia used twice as much electricity as China on a per capita basis and 48% of it came from coal plants, thinktank says
And we still export our coal to China, India and all the others too, so you're not wrong.And yet...
Australia has highest per capita CO2 emissions from coal in G20, analysis finds
That is down from 64%, so...well done? Australia still has a staggeringly dirty economy, the only worse CO2 polluters being small petro-states, so don't get too carried away with the back slapping.
On the other hand, in terms of global CO2 output, it doesn't really make any difference.
Have you seen where I have claimed that?
We may have a different opinion of what significant means.
I will consider it significant when the temp starts to level off or actually go down.
You do love your moving goalposts, don't you?
"There are no realistic alternatives."
"OK, there are, but you can't make people choose them."
"OK, you can, but that won't have any significant effect."
"OK, there is a significant effect, but that's only in one country: it's not global."
Etc etc
Face it: you like being pessimistic and miserable. Nothing anyone can do will ever change that.
In the meantime, I will continue to observe the many positive changes going on around the world, and be happy about them.
Each country is responsible for its own emissions. If every country meets its targets then the global goals will will be achieved. If some exceed their targets then others might get away with doing less, but only so much of that can be tolerated.How will that figure into the global goals?
You do love your moving goalposts, don't you?
"There are no realistic alternatives."
"OK, there are, but you can't make people choose them."
"OK, you can, but that won't have any significant effect."
"OK, there is a significant effect, but that's only in one country: it's not global."
Etc etc
Face it: you like being pessimistic and miserable. Nothing anyone can do will ever change that.
In the meantime, I will continue to observe the many positive changes going on around the world, and be happy about them.
Funny. I didn't say OK to any of those things..
They are certainly realistic ways to reduce emissions.
Yes they have those alternatives
How will that figure into the global goals?
The only positive change going on around the world is temperature. Why do you think anything else really matters?
I'm the most optimistic person I know, and I am anything but miserable.
I really do appreciate your position dann. I am just to cynical about human nature ( selfishness and greed) to effectively argue about these human induced problems, whether the humans are on the giving or the receiving end.
I'll just watch for a while.
Yes they have those alternatives, what do you propose we do to encourage them to take those alternatives?
I'll take cynical, you can have unrealistic..
We have?We've already determined that while these solutions are all well and good, they're nowhere near enough to avert climate disaster.
Nope.Not only was 1.5C set as a sort of doomsday marker that we all need to avoid, now, depending on your source... we're already there.
1.5°C is an arbitrary limit, chosen because it was seen as being achievable. The climate won't blow up if we go a bit over it, it will just be worse.All 1.5°C scenarios... include some overshoot above 1.5°C of global warming during the 21st century... The level of overshoot may also depend on natural climate variability...
The impacts of climate change are being felt in every inhabited continent and in the oceans. However, they are not spread uniformly across the globe, and different parts of the world experience impacts differently. An average warming of 1.5°C across the whole globe raises the risk of heatwaves and heavy rainfall events, amongst many other potential impacts. Limiting warming to 1.5°C rather than 2°C can help reduce these risks, but the impacts the world experiences will depend on the specific greenhouse gas emissions ‘pathway’ taken. The consequences of temporarily overshooting 1.5°C of warming and returning to this level later in the century, for example, could be larger than if temperature stabilizes below 1.5°C. The size and duration of an overshoot will also affect future impacts.
The IPCC's 1.5C number is an average taken over 10 years. By the time we hit that, many places around the World will have experienced much higher temperature increases, and some already have. People living in those places know the consequences of not 'averting'.Yes, that's what I've been saying all along. 1.5C is an abritary target, one that will never be met because very few people are willing to live in an avert 1.5C world.
The activists you are talking about are extremists. Few people will be getting behind their unreasonable demands, but governments are quite capable of meeting targets without being unreasonable. Of course some people will say that any 'impositions' are unreasonable, but that too is unreasonable. As the need for action becomes more obvious those people will be increasingly ignored. Some of them will probably become extremists too - if they aren't already.Sure, they may say they are and willing to get behind activists making unreasonable demands but when push comes to shove, very few people would be happy with the living conditions they demand their government would need to impose on them to make that target.
Excuse me, that is reality.When you get someone like Joe Biden coming out and stating that the only thing scarier than nuclear war is hitting 1.5C (then muttering something about in the next 20-10 years) you gotta wonder just how grounded in reality these people really are.
Net zero is theoretically achievable by 2030, but few think it can realistically be done that quickly. In 2020 China pledged to reach net zero before 2060. New Zealand hopes to do it by 2050. I will probably be dead by then, but I hope to live long enough to see good progress towards that goal.Same with net zero by 2030. Write down some big numbers while noshing on canapés at a big international conference my look good but there' no way no how your citizenry is going to want to live in that world either. Hey, maybe you're an Extinction Rebellion fan, then you know 1.5C is already here and demand net zero by 2025. Hummm, yea, sure guys.
And now we see why. It's all just a joke to you. The serious things happening in the world are merely a backdrop to what really matters to you - boosting your ego in an attempt to become an alpha male. IOW, a typical 'skeptic'. Luckily we don't all act like animals when important matters are being discussed.Here's a great example of identity politics to have a giggle at. One that twists common sense so hard that it screams in agony.
Same-sex couples vulnerable to negative effects of climate change
The IPCC's 1.5C number is an average taken over 10 years. By the time we hit that, many places around the World will have experienced much higher temperature increases, and some already have. People living in those places know the consequences of not 'averting'.
The activists you are talking about are extremists. Few people will be getting behind their unreasonable demands, but governments are quite capable of meeting targets without being unreasonable. Of course some people will say that any 'impositions' are unreasonable, but that too is unreasonable. As the need for action becomes more obvious those people will be increasingly ignored. Some of them will probably become extremists too - if they aren't already.
And now we see why. It's all just a joke to you. The serious things happening in the world are merely a backdrop to what really matters to you - boosting your ego in an attempt to become an alpha male. IOW, a typical 'skeptic'. Luckily we don't all act like animals when important matters are being discussed.
Oh relax, read the article again. Everybody knows that the elderly and disabled are far more at risk from the effects of climate change that the LGBTQ. That piece belongs in The Onion.
The elderly, the disabled, the poor, those who live in less well developed countries...
FWIW, when I had tried to read it, I was unable to reach the page for whatever reason. On a quick search about archive.ph, I saw a claim that as a site, it's dead and I'm just not interested in digging further.
Thus, I can't really comment on the article you cite itself, where it's from, or what audience it was directed towards, which makes it difficult to substantiate your claim in meaningful context. On a quick search of the topic, though, it looks like you're poking at a standing issue. Same-sex couples are one of the groups that are disproportionately at risk due to climate change. Not really either ground-breaking news there or something that's worthy of too much attention beyond potential consideration by disaster preparedness organizations.
The risks to everyone are already reasonably well documented, after all, as are the more general at risk groups.
I support Greta Thunberg when she is being reasonable, same as I do anyone else. Has she called for global net zero by 2025? If so then then I don't support her on that.I don't know about that. Seems to me Greta Thunberg had a lot of support and she was an extremist who used a lot of words to not say much beyond "we need to stop burning fossil fuels". Extinction Rebellion was formed alongside Thunberg and it was in 2020, when their website went live that they issued their net zero by 2025 demand. Support Thunberg, support XR.
I think that's a pretty fair criticism, and I'm with Thunberg's take on it (note: she never suggested setting a goal of net zero for the whole country by 2025).New Zealand, for the record, will come nowhere close to meeting the IPCC’s recommendation that countries reduce emissions to 45 percent below 2010 levels by 2030. In 2030, our net emissions will be just 6 percent below 2010 levels, according to projections from the Ministry for the Environment.
The Government says its net zero public sector target is leading by example.
That’s true – and there’s value in leading by example, but you can’t lead by example alone. Right now, the Government is modelling what it wants us to do – buy EVs, live and work in more energy efficient buildings and reduce emissions in all other aspects of our lives – but expecting us to pick up the burden without giving us the regulatory tools to do so.
That's the kind of activist crap I am putting up with here in New Zealand. I watched those 800 entitled farmers drive their polluting vehicles through the city center in person, and only barely managed to keep my mouth shut (don't want another run-in with the police...).On 5 July 2021, McKenzie invited farmers across New Zealand to participate in a nationwide "Howl of a Protest" campaign on 16 July to protest the Government's new and proposed freshwater regulations, winter grazing rules and indigenous biodiversity regulations. Protesters were encouraged to bring their utes, tractors and dogs into towns across New Zealand ranging from Gore in the South Island to Kerikeri in the North Island. Protests were organised in 20 towns including Alexandra, Gore, Invercargill, Mosgiel, Oamaru, Greymouth, Blenheim, Thames, Hastings, Palmerston North, and Kerikeri.
On 16 July, Groundswell staged protests in 57 cities and towns across New Zealand including Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin, Mosgiel, Whangārei, Dargaville, Kerikeri, Kaitaia, Levin, Dannevirke, Te Awamutu, Amberley, Greymouth, Alexandra, Wānaka, Invercargill, Timaru, Gisborne, and Hastings...
In Dunedin, a counter-protester holding a sign which read "No farming on a dead planet" had it ripped from her by a bystander. National Party Member of Parliament Nicola Willis attended the Wānaka protest. Timaru's streets were occupied by hundreds of utes, trucks, and tractors as South Canterbury farmers and tradespersons protested the Government's regulations.
In Gisborne, protesters travelled in 350 vehicles on Gisborne's main road. Notable participants included All Blacks veteran Ian Kirkpatrick. The Hastings protest saw 800 vehicles drive through the city with one local organiser comparing it to the 1981 Springbok Tour. [Anti-apartheid protests]
On 21 November, Groundswell NZ held its "Mother of All Protests" across 70 towns and centres including Kaitaia, Whangārei, Auckland, Tauranga, New Plymouth, Taupō, Wellington, Nelson, Greymouth, Christchurch, Timaru, Temuka, Geraldine, Waimate, Fairlie, Alexandra, Balclutha, Bluff, Gore, Invercargill, Mosgiel, Oamaru, Palmerston, Queenstown, Stewart Island, Te Anau, and Wānaka.
In mid October 2022, Groundswell announced that it would hold a nationwide tractor protest on 20 October to protest against the Government's plans to charge farmers for greenhouse carbon emissions from 2025. McKenzie described the carbon emissions pricing scheme as an "assault on food production and rural communities". Protest convoys were planned for the major cities of Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, and Dunedin as well as several smaller centres...
Protest numbers were smaller compared to earlier protests with low turnout being blamed on farmers being busy during that time of the year. Groundswell's October protests also attracted several activists from the anti-vaccination group Voices for Freedom.