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Brendanjones, to climate
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Can somebody explain to me how any climate scientists think we will stay below 1.5C by 2100? I don’t see how we can keep below 1.5C considering the current temperature, the continued rate of high emissions, and the likely future efforts to reduce emissions (specifically, the insufficient efforts in the near future).

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/may/08/world-scientists-climate-failure-survey-global-temperature

ahoyboyhoy,
Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar
Brendanjones, to random
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Now that quote posts are coming (confirmed by Renaud https://oisaur.com/@renchap/112299860209222424 ), I think it important that we have agreed upon acceptable usage.

Quote posts can be an amazing tool – there's a good reason they're so requested – but they also have the potential to add massive amounts of toxicity.

Gargron recognised this years ago: https://mastodon.social/@Gargron/99662106175542726

So here's my proposal for the Do's and Dont's of quote posting on Mastodon. Please boost!

🧵 Thread time:

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

@eco_amandine @NatureMC reply restrictions are on their roadmap as 'exploring': https://joinmastodon.org/roadmap

It's the third-most upvoted feature on Github so you'd think it'd have fairly high priority: https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/8565

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

@urlyman yup! Guidelines only. Subjective as hell.

And yeah “be thoughtful, don’t be an ass” is right. Basically the same as "Does it add value and is it kind?"

https://fosstodon.org/@Brendanjones/112302629478694481

Brendanjones, to climate
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Fantastic. This is the kind of thing that'll directly drive reductions in fossil fuel projects.

"Zurich Insurance Group AG will no longer underwrite new oil and gas projects, and is cracking down on clients planning to expand in metallurgical coal mining."

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-04-08/zurich-insurance-to-halt-coverage-of-new-fossil-fuel-exposures

Brendanjones, to climate
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

In a credibility-destroying move, the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) have decided to allow companies to count offsets towards reducing their scope 3 emissions.

Five SBTi teams have written an open letter calling for the CEO and Board who voted in favour to resign, and other orgs have also come out against it: https://carbonmarketwatch.org/publications/open-letter-on-the-use-of-carbon-credits-to-meet-scope-3-ghg-targets/

Full summary here: https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/companies-get-green-light-use-offsets-supply-chain-emissions-2024-04-10/

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar
Brendanjones, to Economics
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

One thing that irks me about firms in (capitalist) markets is that they don't share information.

Capitalism is supposedly an efficient driver of innovation, but how efficient can it be when efforts are surely duplicated far more often than would happen if firms were collaborating?

So, how do you structure companies and inter-company relationships to foster both innovation (through competition?) and collaboration? Anyone have any info on this?

nickdumas,
@nickdumas@fosstodon.org avatar

@Brendanjones yeah You've hit the nail on the head. Capitalism is extremely competent at finding "local maxima", so to speak, but calamitously bad at finding global ones.

Capitalism can produce high yield for a very limited set of people. By design.

robryk,
@robryk@qoto.org avatar

@Brendanjones

There's some reason to care about own/own company's wealth instrumentally then: it allows it to benefit society more or, imo more importantly, allows it to continue doing so for longer by allowing it to weather larger disruptions. For the same reason preserving competitive advantage seems instrumentally desirable.

This all obviously assumes that spending wealth is necessary to get dinner services the company or its employees need, but I don't see how that could not hold in any world vaguely similar to current Europe.

Obviously that creates a rationalisation-inducing trap: how much wealth is enough? How do we weigh continued survival of the company (and thus increased fraction of companies that try to benefit society) against preserving secrets? (Or do we try to e.g. share them with other similar companies only?)

I'm curious whether you have a different viewpoint on this.

Brendanjones, to UX
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

My wish for 2024 is for 'onboarding' to be added to keyboard dictionaries.

No, computer, I did not mean 'on-boarding' or 'on boarding'. Stop red-underlining my words.

ahoyboyhoy,

@Brendanjones I feel this

Brendanjones, to climate
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

“When environmental defenders are tried in future they will be barred from giving evidence of climate impacts to the jury to explain their motives”

Quite a worrying development in the UK, especially for climate protestors but also generally for anyone facing the justice system.

https://www.desmog.com/2024/03/19/court-of-appeal-rules-climate-crisis-a-matter-of-opinion/

Brendanjones, to firefox
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

I’m seeing more and more sites not working in for iOS - the latest is LinkedIn.

It was working a few months ago, but now it’s completely messed up compared to how it displays in Safari and Chrome. I refuse to download their app.

It always seems to be companies that very much have the resources to make their website interoperable, so it’s very obviously an intentional choice. Not a great sign for the .

This is not a criticism of Firefox, quite the opposite.

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

@sirber I am aware. What did you mean to imply?

sirber,
@sirber@fosstodon.org avatar

@Brendanjones since everyone uses the same engine, I'm wondering what Firefox does to break things.

Brendanjones, to nuclear
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

"Australia’s biggest smelter to launch massive wind and solar tender, says nuclear too costly"

When Rio Tinto are going all-in on renewables and saying nuclear is too expensive, are people still going to keep saying that we need nuclear?

https://reneweconomy.com.au/australias-biggest-smelter-to-launch-massive-wind-and-solar-tender-says-nuclear-too-costly/

Brendanjones, to random
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Wowsers. @terzibus here basically saying 'there's a problem but it's politically hard to fix so we won't fix it' is certainly an ... er ... interesting dismissal.

https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/degrowth-movement-is-politically-impractical-by-alessio-terzi-2024-03

noam,

@Brendanjones @terzibus @deshipu
To be fair, the main point about political difficulty in implementation is a valid one.

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

@noam @deshipu Yes, absolutely. But to throw out the entirety of degrowth just because solutions to it are hard is ridiculous, it's putting your head in the sand and hoping the problem will go away.

I suspect the author has a superficial understanding of the process side of degrowth without actually understanding the critique side of it. What I mean by the process and critique parts of it: https://fosstodon.org/@Brendanjones/112087277455885780

Brendanjones, (edited ) to random
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Turns out the only thing that certain Marxists hate more than is the idea that Marx was the original degrowther.

Jacobin publishing degrowth hit pieces is nothing new, but Kohei Sotei's vision of degrowth communism obviously riles them up so much that Leigh Philips and Matt Huber felt the need to get together and co-author an article.

The hate is palpable, and amusing: https://jacobin.com/2024/03/kohei-saito-degrowth-communism-environment-marxism

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

The history of Jacobin's degrowth-bashing: https://fosstodon.org/@Brendanjones/112015701817614974

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

For the record, I couldn't give two figs if Marx was pro-degrowth or not. It has zero bearing on how we approach today's environmental, political and social problems.

I just find a certain schadenfreude in anti-degrowth Marxists having their idol adopted as the patron saint of the thing they hate. Thanks for the entertainment, Saito.

Brendanjones, (edited ) to books
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

I've been meaning to read Tim Jackson's books for many years but never got around to it.

Does anybody have opinions on which to read, if I were to choose just one?

The choice is between Prosperity Without Growth (2009) and Post Growth: Life After Capitalism (2021).

I am well read on and in general so don't need an intro. I'm more interested in visions of post growth systems than critique of growth.

jlou,

@Brendanjones Everything else you've read. What is the philosophical basis for their concern with environmental pressures in the aggregate?

I want to read up on degrowth.

Wild animal welfare advocates are in favor of actively intervening in nature to improve wild animal welfare including against natural suffering that is not caused by humans. This can lead to conflict with environmentalists who seek to conserve nature as it is

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

@jlou Environmental pressure is the core philosophical concern of , along with human wellbeing.

So, degrowth is both a critique and a process.

The critique is of economies that cause and are dependent on continuous (GDP) growth (eg capitalism), and the fact that growth requires resources and energy, the extraction, processing, use and waste of which is tightly linked to environmental pressure. (1/2)

Brendanjones, to climate
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Blimey, we just hit 21.2°C global average sea surface temperature. First time that's happened in recorded history.

peterbutler,
@peterbutler@mas.to avatar

@Brendanjones I don’t think most people even realize that the biggest impact of global warming has been on the oceans — like 90% of the excess heat energy goes into the water

we ain’t seen nothing yet

https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-ocean-heat-content

wavygk,
@wavygk@mastodon.nz avatar

@AlexsandraSmart @Brendanjones @drclareharris

not sure if this is open access but this paper by Melissa Bowen and Phil Sutton shows the temperature with depth for some of NZ oceans.

They also look at the depth at which the surface data stops being representative of deeper temperatures. It varies with latitude and season but sort of 50-150 m - ish.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00288330.2018.1562945

Brendanjones, to science
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

“according to a recently published survey, lots of digital documents aren't consistently showing up in the archives that are meant to preserve it. And that puts us at risk of losing academic research—including science paid for with taxpayer money.”

https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/03/study-finds-that-we-could-lose-science-if-publishers-go-bankrupt/?

Brendanjones, to sustainability
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Can we fulfill basic needs for 10 billion humans without destabilizing the Earth system? Can we live in the donut (economy)?

The answer is 'yes', according to this new paper:

"it is theoretically possible to satisfy the basic needs of 10.4 billion people within ecological limits. However, large-scale transformations in all sectors and dietary changes are necessary to guarantee safe climate conditions."

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652624008953

Brendanjones,
@Brendanjones@fosstodon.org avatar

Gotta say, there's some absolutely bangin' reading in the references for this paper. An excellent assortment of research into all sorts of earth and human systems.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652624008953#bib1

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