Collapse

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This is the place for discussing the potential collapse of modern civilization and the environment.


Collapse, in this context, refers to the significant loss of an established level or complexity towards a much simpler state. It can occur differently within many areas, orderly or chaotically, and be willing or unwilling. It does not necessarily imply human extinction or a singular, global event. Although, the longer the duration, the more it resembles a ‘decline’ instead of collapse.


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1 - Remember the human

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3 - All opinions are allowed but discussion must be in good faith.

4 - No low effort, high volume and low relevance posts.


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founded 5 months ago
MODERATORS
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Sustainable planet for all, for very small values thereof.

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Abstract

Social movements have the power to drive large-scale social change but the effectiveness of disruptive tactics in achieving this change is uncertain. To shed light on this debate, we conducted nationally representative surveys before and after a week-long disruptive campaign to block London’s M25 motorway (November 2022) by the protest group Just Stop Oil (n = 1,415). Our results suggest that increased awareness of a radical group as a result of a highly publicized non-violent disruptive protest can increase identification with and support for more moderate climate groups (here, Friends of the Earth) in the span of only 2 weeks. Our study provides new insights into the dynamics of social movements and the role of radical protest in driving change. The positive radical flank effect observed here suggests that non-violent radical actions may constitute a largely untapped strategic resource for moderate groups within the broader climate movement.

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Abstract

The Last Interglacial period (LIG) was characterized by a long-term Arctic atmospheric warming above the preindustrial level. The LIG thus provides a case study of Arctic feedback mechanisms of the cryosphere-ocean circulation-climate system under warm climatic conditions. Previous studies suggested a delay in the LIG peak warming in the North Atlantic compared to the Southern Ocean and evoked the possibility of southward extension of Arctic sea ice to the southern Norwegian Sea during the early LIG. Here we compile new and published proxy data on past changes in sea ice distribution, sea surface temperature and salinity, deep ocean convection, and meltwater sources based on well-dated records from the Norwegian Sea. Our data suggest that southward outflow of Arctic freshwater supressed Nordic Seas deep-water formation and northward oceanic heat transport during the early LIG. These findings showcase the complex feedback interactions between a warming climate, sea ice, ocean circulation and regional climate.

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Abstract

While the effects of climatic changes on migration have received widespread public and scientific attention, comparative evidence for their influence on internal migration worldwide remains scarce. Here we use census-based data from 72 countries (1960–2016) to analyse 107,840 migration flows between subnational regions. We find that increased drought and aridity have a significant impact on internal migration, particularly in the hyper-arid and arid areas of Southern Europe, South Asia, Africa and the Middle East and South America. Migration patterns are shaped by the wealth, agricultural dependency and urbanization of both origin and destination areas with migration responses being stronger in rural and predominantly agricultural areas. While overall climatic effects on migration are stronger in richer countries, we observe higher out-migration from poorer towards wealthier regions within countries. Furthermore, age and education groups respond differently to climatic stress, highlighting distinct mobility patterns of population subgroups across different geographic contexts.

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Editor’s summary

Anthropogenic climate change has made wildfires bigger, hotter, and more common. Jones et al. used a machine learning approach to break down the “why” and “where” of the observed increases. The authors identified different forest ecoregions, grouped them into 12 global forest pyromes, and described their differing sensitivities to climate, humans, and vegetation. Their analysis shows how forest fire carbon emissions have increased in extratropical pyromes, where climate is the major control, overtaking emissions from the tropical pyromes, where human influence is most important. It also illustrates the increasing vulnerability of forests to fire disturbance under climate change. —Jesse Smith

Structured Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Forest fires are a natural disturbance mechanism made more likely by climate change, with major impacts on global forest ecosystems and carbon (C) storage. Recent trends show a worrying increase in forest fire activity, particularly in extratropical regions. This study aims to disentangle the factors driving the recent increases in fire activity by analyzing global forest fire extent and emissions and their relationship with climatic, human, and vegetation controls. Using machine learning, we grouped global forest ecoregions into 12 distinct pyromes in which forest fire extent depends on similar sets of controls.

RATIONALE

Understanding the drivers of fires in distinct pyromes is essential for developing targeted strategies to predict and manage fire risks. By grouping forest ecoregions into pyromes with distinct fire controls, we aimed to better understand the regional variations in fire dynamics and their sensitivity to climate change. This approach allows us to isolate the effects of climate change from other influencing factors such as land use and vegetation productivity.

RESULTS

Our analysis revealed that extratropical forest fire emissions have increased substantially under climate change. Fire emissions in one extratropical pyrome spanning boreal forests in Eurasia and North America nearly tripled between 2001 and 2023. This increase was linked to a rise in fire-favorable weather conditions, reduced soil moisture, and increased vegetation productivity. By contrast, tropical pyromes showed a decline in fire emissions linked to reduced deforestation fires in moist tropical forests and increased fragmentation of dry tropical forests with agriculture and other land uses. Overall, forest fire C emissions increased by 60% globally during the study period, with the most substantial contributions coming from extratropical regions. The increase in extratropical fire activity highlights the strong influence of climatic factors compared with human activities, which play a more dominant role in tropical regions. The increases in forest fire C emissions were explained both by changes in fire extent and by changes in fire severity (measured in terms of the C emitted per unit area burned by fire). In the extratropical forest pyromes, we observed major increases in fire severity alongside expansion of areas affected by fire. This finding shows that the intensity and severity of fires is increasing in extratropical forests, which is consistent with fires affecting drier, more flammable stocks of vegetation fuels as the climate warms and as droughts become more frequent.

CONCLUSION

The steep trend toward greater extratropical forest fire emissions is a warning of the growing vulnerability of forest C stocks to climate change. This poses a major challenge for global targets to tackle climate change, with fire reducing the capacity of forests to act as C sinks. Effective forest management and policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions are essential to mitigate these risks. Our study underscores the importance of considering regional distinctions in the controls on fire when developing strategies to manage fire and protect forest ecosystems. Proactive measures such as monitoring changes in vegetation and productivity can guide the prioritization of areas for forest management in the extratropics. In tropical pyromes, reducing ignitions during extreme fire-favorable weather and preventing forest fragmentation should protect forests and enhance C retention. In regions with substantial fire suppression history, shifting focus to managed, ecologically beneficial fires may prevent C sink-to-source conversion. Addressing the primary causes of climate change, particularly fossil fuel emissions, is central to minimizing future risks of forest fires globally and securing resilient forests for the future. In addition, our work supports growing calls for more comprehensive reporting of forest fire emissions to the United Nations as part of national reporting of anthropogenic C fluxes. The present norm of counting forest fire emissions fluxes as natural, on both managed and unmanaged land, is increasingly at odds with the observed growth in fire emission fluxes tied to anthropogenic climate change. This contributes to emerging gaps between the anthropogenic C budgets that are officially reported to the United Nations and the budgets constructed based on models and observations of terrestrial C stocks or atmospheric concentrations of CO2. Finally, we highlight the potential for major overestimation of C storage (and therefore C credits) by reafforestation schemes in extratropical forests if the growing risk of fire disturbance is not appropriately factored into accreditation protocols.

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Geopolitical (Un)realities (thehonestsorcerer.substack.com)
submitted 6 days ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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The loss of the Earth’s protective ozone layer would result in several years of extremely high ultraviolet (UV) light at the surface, a hazard to human health and food production. Most recent estimates indicate that the ozone loss after a global nuclear war would lead to a tropical UV index above 35, starting three years after the war and lasting for four years. The US Environmental Protection Agency considers a UV index of 11 to pose an “extreme” danger; 15 minutes of exposure to a UV index of 12 causes unprotected human skin to experience sunburn. Globally, the average sunlight in the UV-B range would increase by 20 percent. High levels of UV-B radiation are known to cause sunburn, photoaging, skin cancer, and cataracts in humans. They also inhibit the photolysis reaction required for leaf expansion and plant growth.

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