The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: COP28: Flimsy ‘Transition Away from Fossil Fuels’ Agreed in Last Minute Negotiations
Dear Diary. Yesterday we presented Dr. Michael Mann and Climate Communications Susan Hassol’s two cents on what happened during COP28, which was the yearly convention to firm up international agreements to stymie carbon pollution from going into the air:
Today for part two on this topic, I’m presenting my friend Brian McHugh’s thoughts on COP28 now that a last-minute agreement was finalized…and there have always been “last minute “negotiated agreements with these things in recent years.
In my opinion, history (if mankind can write history for centuries to come if civilization does continue) will not look kindly on what came out of COP28. My friend Dr. Katherine Hayhoe thinks that as well:
Going into #COP28, Sultan Al Jaber said he was the one to bring industry to the table and get them to act. Record numbers of fossil fuel lobbyists did attend the conference, and they did act: helping to weaken the Global Stocktake text + striking 37 oil & gas deals while there.
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) December 13, 2023
We as a species should put some hard breaks on carbon pollution for the sake of all those coming after us. Perhaps over the next several months even worse weather effects than those from 2023 due to a combination of a strong El Niño in conjunction with climate change will spur delegates to make much better decisions during COP29 by the time that is held. We will see.
Here is Brian’s new article:
Many thanks to Prof Bill McGuire for his timely comments on #COP28 @ProfBillMcGuire
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) December 13, 2023
My evaluation for @YorksBylines
Will COP now be reformed? @MichaelEMannhttps://t.co/mvnhPHBQuG
COP28: flimsy ‘transition away from fossil fuels’ agreed in last minute negotiations
As COP28 closes, countries have failed to agree to phase out fossil fuels and failed to deliver on climate ambition
by Brian McHugh 13-12-2023 12:09 in Environment, World
COP28 negotiating countries failed to include clear language on the phasing out of fossil fuel production as the climate conference in Dubai came to a conclusion. The legally binding treaty of the Paris agreement, where countries agreed to “pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5℃ above pre-industrial levels”, is now left in tatters.
Although COP28 extended beyond its official finishing time on Tuesday 12 December, giving rise to the possibility of a historic landmark agreement, the decisive and bold language to compel countries to phase out fossil fuels was missing.
After fraught negotiations and a lack of definition over key terms, including ‘phase out’ and ‘phase down’, countries failed to collaborate for the future of humanity to make decisive promises to uphold the Paris agreement.
At the start of the summit, COP28 President Sultan al Jaber declared that “Failure is not an option”. For many commentators, especially ex-Vice President Al Gore, climate commitments have dried up and died in Dubai.
Failure to achieve ‘highest ambitions’
On Monday 11 December, the UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell called for the “highest ambitions” to be delivered as outcomes. He said:
“Negotiators have a chance, right here in Dubai over the next 24 hours, to start a new chapter – one that really delivers for people and planet.
“The highest climate ambition means more jobs, stronger economies, stronger economic growth, less pollution, better health.
“One thing is for certain: ‘I win – you lose’ is a recipe for collective failure. Ultimately it is 8 billion people’s security that is at stake.
“Science is the backbone of the Paris Agreement, especially when it comes to the world’s temperature goals and the planetary limit of 1.5. That center must hold.”
However, later that day, a draft agreement was presented by the summit president Sultan Al Jaber, which caused seismic rifts between parties owing to the lack of forceful language.
Opening positions on global action
The draft agreement was typically full of conference language such as “recognizes”, “reaffirms”, “emphasizes”, and “notes” which do not mean much to the general public. There was an optimistic opening though, with the agreement stating that rising emissions are not in line with the Paris agreement to which countries are signatories.
“… 20. Recognizes that the impacts of climate change will be much lower at the temperature increase of 1.5 °C compared with 2 °C and resolves to pursue efforts to limit temperature increase to 1.5 °C;
“… 28. Notes with significant concern that despite progress made, global greenhouse gas emissions trajectories are not yet in line with the temperature goal of the Paris Agreement, and that there is a rapidly narrowing window to raise ambition and implement existing commitments in order to achieve it;
“Negotiations are always going to come down to the obstacles of meanings of particular words or the omission of words. At this stage, the lack of the inclusion of ‘phase out’ fossil fuels caused significant distress to countries such as the Marshall Islands, with the MInister Senator John Silk stating, ‘The Marshall Islands did not come here to sign out death warrant. We came here to fight for 1.5C and for the only way to achieve that: a fossil fuel phase out’.”
An optional phase out will not be successful
The agreement offered optional plans for countries to reduce emissions – encouraging individual countries to ignore what wasn’t in their short term best interests, by stating that parties “could” choose to include these in their action plans.
“… 39. Also recognizes the need for deep, rapid and sustained reductions in GHG emissions and calls upon Parties to take actions that could include, inter alia:
(a) Tripling renewable energy capacity globally and doubling the global average annual rate of energy efficiency improvements by 2030;
(b) Rapidly phasing down unabated coal and limitations on permitting new and unabated coal power generation;
(e) Reducing both consumption and production of fossil fuels, in a just, orderly and equitable manner so as to achieve net zero by, before, or around 2050 in keeping with the science.”
These optional steps contrast sharply against the stated aim of the summit holders that:
“Negotiations at COP28 continue today with the hope that Parties will deliver an ambitious agreement that sets the world on a path to a more sustainable future.”
Has the 1.5℃ climate goal finally died in Dubai?
Gore was highly condemnatory of the draft agreement, posting on social media that:
“COP28 is now on the verge of complete failure. The world desperately needs to phase out fossil fuels as quickly as possible but this obsequious draft reads as if OPEC dictated it word for word. It is even worse than many had feared … the final text must include clear language on phasing out fossil fuels. Anything else is a massive step backwards from where the world needs to be to truly address the climate crisis and make sure the 1.5℃ goal doesn’t die in Dubai.”
Sir Alok Sharma, who held the presidency of COP26, commented, “It is difficult to see how this text will help to achieve the deep and rapid cut in emissions we need by 2030 to keep 1.5c alive. With so many countries backing clear language on fossil-fuel-phase-out, who does this text actually serve?”
COP28 failed to deliver on ambition
The final agreement came out in the early hours of Wednesday morning UK time and was celebrated by the COP28 president as being an “unprecedented reference to transitioning away from all fossil fuels”, further declaring that this was “… the moment history was made. Everyone came together from day one. Everyone united, everyone acted, everyone delivered”.
To be sure, including the naming the ‘elephant in the room’ of fossil fuels is a huge step forward in language only, it is not a step forward in action.
The new final agreement moved the language from “could include” to a slightly stronger invite word of “calls on”.
“Further recognizes the need for deep, rapid and sustained reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in line with 1.5℃pathways and calls on Parties to contribute to the following global efforts, in a nationally determined manner, taking into account the Paris Agreement and their different national circumstances, pathways and approaches.”
As a result, Professor Bill McGuire, of University College London, told Yorkshire Bylines:
“The final deal has now been utterly agreed, and it is dismal.
“We need emissions to be almost halved in 72 months, and we get some meaningless drivel about ‘transitioning away’ from fossil fuels. No roadmap, no timeline, nothing.
“At the same time, we are told by the COP28 President and oil boss ‘we have delivered a robust action plan to keep 1.5℃ … in reach’. This is duplicitous nonsense. Staying this side of a 1.5℃rise (compared to pre-industrial times) is practically impossible, and the laughable outcome of COP28 has done nothing to change this.
“Massive reform to the COP process is needed if it is ever to accomplish what the science says is needed. A good start would be to scrap COP29 – slated to be held in another oil state, Azerbaijan, and rethink the whole process.”
COP28: what happens now?
Professor Stefan Rahmstorf, of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research bleakly commented on social media:
How will we explain to our children and grandchildren that unfortunately we couldn’t leave them with a livable planet because a few petro-states vetoed phasing out fossil fuels?”
The likely result could be more groups taking countries and governments to court for breaking both domestic law and legally binding international climate agreements. It may be that stronger calls for reform may see the voting rules change at climate conferences, or even we may have seen the last COP.
The result of COP28 won’t do anything to lessen the increasing climate risks that are happening today for people globally.
Brian McHugh
Brian has lived in North Yorkshire for over 10 years. He is very interested in climate related issues and has recently edited a climate book due for release later this year. Air pollution and chemical pollution are particular areas of interest for him.
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
NORTH AMERICA is and will keep being exceptionally warm in the next weeks.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 12, 2023
Records are falling from Canada to Cuba
Yesterday warmest December days:
CANADA
13.8C La Scie
12.4C St. Anthony
10.9C Mary's Harbour
CUBA
33.2 Santa Lucia https://t.co/q7k8ntpuKE
Exceptional heat yesterday in SPAIN (see list below) most of which broke with huge margins their December records:Malaga,Murcia,Valencia,Novelda,
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
Ontinyent,Alcoi,Xativa,Lorca,etc.
Impressive 26.0C at Palma de Mallorca Port.
Record Highest Tmin 9.8C at Soria (1082m) on the 10th. https://t.co/nqNq6UGjwr
Foehn appeared in western Sichuan today. Ganluo 29.1C was only 0.1C lower than the provincial record. 17 stations broke December record. Temperatures will soar tomorrow, and hundreds of weather stations will break the record for December! @extremetemps https://t.co/YwkAyH3KHu
— Jim yang (@yangyubin1998) December 13, 2023
Here is more new November 2023 climatology:New brutal and historic heat wave in SOUTH AMERICA specially in Argentina,Paraguay,Uruguay and Brazil.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
Extremely hot days,nights and high humidity will be a deadly combination
PARAGUAY can record 6 CONSECUTIVE NIGHTS ABOVE >30c OF min. temperature, never happened in South America https://t.co/Bi8ICgo59X
November 2023 in #Cuba had an average temperature of 26.3C, which is 1.1C above normal and was the 3rd warmest November on record.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
Playa Giron with 33.1C set a new monthly record of highest temperature.
It was drier than average in the West and wetter in the East.
Map by Insmet. pic.twitter.com/9uOztYYFcj
November 2023 in #Peru was very warm along the coast ,while it was warmer than average in the daytime and colder nightime in the andine highlands.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
Maps by Senamhi Peru. pic.twitter.com/XN36TIZOFz
November 2023 in #Paraguay was very warm with temperature anomalies from +0.5C in the East to +3C in the West (left map)
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
National monthly heat record was broken both of hottest day and night (right)
It was wetter than normal in the East,drier in the West.
Se anomalies maps by DMH pic.twitter.com/wlobXK9DQW
November 2023 in #Portugal had an average temperature of 13.78C which is 1.33C above the 1981-2010 baseline (left).
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 13, 2023
Average precipitation was 122.2mm which is near normal but drier in the South and wetter in the Northwest (right).
Maps by IPMA. pic.twitter.com/IiOzDUFEhQ
More news and notes from COP28:
"Why some climate experts are criticizing what’s happened at the #COP28 climate conference" | I spoke with @GeoffRBennett of the @PBS @NewsHour: https://t.co/RInpjKQCl5
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 13, 2023
People power put a full/fast/fair/funded fossil fuel phaseout at the top of the #COP28 agenda. While we didn’t get there, the agreement calls to ‘transition away from fossil fuels,’ sending a signal to the fossil fuel industry that its days are numbered. https://t.co/IylRgKJons pic.twitter.com/TpZsp3MjLX
— Oil Change International (@PriceofOil) December 13, 2023
#BREAKING: Countries at #COP28 agree to transition away from fossil fuels, although fail to commit to a full phase out.
— WWF (@WWF) December 13, 2023
This is significant as the outcome signals the beginning of the end for the fossil fuel era.
Now, we'll need to see this go from agreement to action. pic.twitter.com/GYGQhyq4uY
We are ending 2023, the hottest year on record, with a carefully-worded acknowledgement from global climate negotiators that fossil fuels are indeed killing us and many other living things on this planet and we pinky-swear promise to stop using them as soon as we can.
— Jeff Goodell (@jeffgoodell) December 13, 2023
COP28: As the globally warmest year on record wraps up, with thousands killed by climate change around the planet, the COP28 achieved a last-minute modest breakthrough—a much needed commitment to transition away from fossil fuel use
— Jonathan Overpeck (@GreatLakesPeck) December 13, 2023
Just been trying to explain this to my daughter who is v excited they've agreed to end use of fossil fuels after hearing about it on the radio...
— Leo Hickman (@LeoHickman) December 13, 2023
Me: "I invite you to tidy your room is not quite the same as I demand that you tidy your room NOW."
Her: "Oh, yeah." https://t.co/yQiKPyAp5v
The world has declared the end of the fossil fuel era at #COP28 .
— Catherine Abreu (@catabreu_) December 13, 2023
This is an extraordinary turning point for these negotiations that has come far later than it needed to.
Policy makers and investors take note: you will be held to this decision. No loopholes, no delay. pic.twitter.com/ahdeixWr4a
"#COP28 has delivered, for the first time at climate talks, a clear call on countries to transition away from fossil fuels,” says UNEP’s @andersen_inger.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) December 13, 2023
As the conference concludes, the focus must shift to rapid, decisive action.
More: https://t.co/JowAAtPUNW pic.twitter.com/A5SojXZjdr
📢📢NEW📢📢
— Simon Evans (@DrSimEvans) December 13, 2023
THE definitive @CarbonBrief summary of #COP28, an epic team effort by all my brilliant colleagues (+ me)
HUGE thanks to the dozens of experts, wonks, geeks, friends who gave quotes & helped us pull this together
(Final sections coming tmrw)https://t.co/gH1mLvEUne pic.twitter.com/cmY1hSvHSR
To those who opposed a clear reference to phase out of fossil fuels during the #COP28 Climate Conference, I want to say:
— António Guterres (@antonioguterres) December 13, 2023
Whether you like it or not, fossil fuel phase out is inevitable. Let’s hope it doesn’t come too late. pic.twitter.com/q2LqMw75K1
Under the cover of a dark Dubai night, #COP28 cooked up a weak sauce of a climate half-measures that fall far short of what's need to stop dangerous warming. https://t.co/7L2BVimbqa
— Bob Berwyn (@bberwyn) December 13, 2023
Paris plans to cover up to half of the city with an “urban forest" https://t.co/UhsLB65Du3
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 14, 2023
We have so many solutions. Conserving and restoring nature is a big part of them. #ActOnClimate#climate #nature #rewilding pic.twitter.com/Mv0FjAdpJM
COP28 is the first to talk about the end of “fossil fuels”, so it tells us what we already knew - the fossil fuel era is ending.
— Vanessa Nakate (@vanessa_vash) December 13, 2023
But it’s a desperately weak deal that again leaves the Global South without the climate finance it needs. It also mentions transition fuels, and pic.twitter.com/LCiqDISJh8
It took 28 years of UN climate talks to recognise for the first time that there is a need to transition away from fossil fuels
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) December 13, 2023
That’s the power of Big Oil: no phase-out, no deadline, no commitment, dodgy “transition fuels”, even after 28 years of talks#COP28 pic.twitter.com/eK1rmuq6Qf
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Wednesday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
What a difference 40 years makes! Tale of two years, both strong El Nino’s. Left: 2023 Sept-Nov departure from normal. Right: 1982 same. You see the 1982 El Niño over the East Trop Pacific, but otherwise the globe is more balanced. That’s how much Earth has warmed in 4 decades! pic.twitter.com/ItxoyjVLFT
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) December 13, 2023
📈 The key El Niño monitoring region in the equatorial Pacific, Niño 3.4, has registered a 30-day anomaly of 2.0˚C above average for the first time during this El Niño event.
— Ben Noll (@BenNollWeather) December 13, 2023
Only 2015 & 1997 were warmer in Niño 3.4 over the same time period, dating back to 1981. pic.twitter.com/gJVPcd0mED
Temperatures continued to set new records in the Northern Hemisphere last month. Yikes, 2023 sure has been one for the books.
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 13, 2023
Data from @CopernicusECMWF ERA5 reanalysis at https://t.co/e7aUafgc7S. pic.twitter.com/kgAfp8M4Sl
Congrats to the 0.7% of the Lower 48 that is running cooler than normal so fat this month. pic.twitter.com/rIDMVlBH3o
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 13, 2023
With both poles observing unusually low sea ice conditions, global sea ice extent is the 2nd lowest on record (after 2016) for today's date...
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 13, 2023
More sea ice graphics available at https://t.co/ecHYax1KfT pic.twitter.com/3xtTTW0iZL
The world must get onto the blue path: cut greenhouse gas emissions in half over the next seven years!
— Prof. Stefan Rahmstorf 🌏 🦣 (@rahmstorf) December 13, 2023
That is what “keeping 1.5° alive” means. #IPCC
And we must limit warming to 1.5° to avert a planetary scale disaster.
All countries agreed to that 2015 in Paris.#COP28 pic.twitter.com/8nMtVxuywK
Exciting new report from Project Drawdown shows how changing your bank might be one of the most effective climate solution levers we can pull.
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) December 12, 2023
Some coverage from Fast Company:https://t.co/IkL3F5lbsn
"Stop giving power to people who don't believe in science or worse than that, pretend they don't believe in climate change for their own self-interest." Harrison Ford
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 13, 2023
There is no time to wait. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables #biodiversity #GreenNewDeal #cop28 pic.twitter.com/KXBfgqArpI
Today, we celebrate the 8th Anniversary of the Paris Climate Agreement – and nearly three years since America rejoined, signaling to the world that inaction wasn't an option.
— President Biden (@POTUS) December 12, 2023
Since then, we've set the U.S. on a historic course to tackle the climate crisis at home and abroad. pic.twitter.com/3CQDA8T9Wn
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Rich nations are touting progress on climate change while ramping up oil and gas drilling.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 13, 2023
These countries can truthfully claim to be cutting emissions, even as they export fossil fuels — and the pollution they produce — overseas, writes @BillMcKibben.https://t.co/OkmV8Ch5UB
Paris plans to cover up to half of the city with an “urban forest" https://t.co/UhsLB65Du3
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 14, 2023
We have so many solutions. Conserving and restoring nature is a big part of them. #ActOnClimate#climate #nature #rewilding pic.twitter.com/Mv0FjAdpJM
This Mexico City food market doubles as a solar farm. It's covered in 35,000 solar panels and could generate 27 million kWh per year.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 12, 2023
Isn't it time for all commerical buildings to get a solar upgrade? #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables #renewableenergy #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/rPthbRb46b
Solar boom in Europe: from 20 GW installed in 2020 to 56 GW this year! This year's crop alone should be good for ~2.5% of all electricity.
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) December 13, 2023
It was about time after many years of stagnation. https://t.co/7EVNPUUiVf
More from the Weather Department:
An updated Day 3-7 Hazards Outlook has been issued. https://t.co/VBxTZCpCic pic.twitter.com/uUBDbQAz6Q
— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) December 13, 2023
12Z Euro and UKMET high-res both showing Saturday's low tracking near Tampa, with a large area of 40-knot winds offshore of the Treasure Coast. Coastal flooding a big concern. And with 925-hPa winds of 50-60 knots, could see winds gusting to 60 mph at times along the coast. pic.twitter.com/bKzC9ha2ls
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) December 13, 2023
The outlook for an extremely wet Wednesday-Sunday is holding, with the #Miami area in the 7-10" range as of the Wednesday morning forecast.
— Brian McNoldy (@BMcNoldy) December 13, 2023
(Imagine if it was all snow!!)
Not out of the question that this becomes Subtropical Storm Vince in the Gulf before reaching Florida. pic.twitter.com/m35hwSokcM
FYI, the weekend system will likely *not* be subtropical. Cyclone phase diagrams show a brief, very shallow warm core, but it quickly becomes cold core as it deepens and goes up the east coast. Impacts similar to a TS for Florida either way.https://t.co/TWph6SiTw0 pic.twitter.com/C5xuZUgRag
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) December 13, 2023
EURO ensembles here trending little more north each run matching GFS as far as 'center' goes. Could mean more incoming storms/rains to watch for the Florida peninsula. Stronger stuff more likely on the right side on approach Sat/Sun. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/U9KtO4GrZL
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) December 13, 2023
Models continue to come into even better agreement regarding the development of a strong Pacific Jet next week, fueled by the descent of an anomalous high pressure into the lower elevations of Eastern Asia (+EAMT). This jet stream will flood North America with mild, moist air. pic.twitter.com/g9X4NXLJzE
— John Homenuk (@jhomenuk) December 13, 2023
Well this is no way to run a #winter. As we head towards the heart of winter, #cold air is absent across the N Hemisphere outside of the Bering Sea and new #snow is scant. Time to start a milk carton campaign for Ol' Man Winter. pic.twitter.com/d1VUH478am
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 13, 2023
I double down that we are approaching a make or break event for #winter 2024 with the potential for a large #PolarVortex (PV) disruption; I even discuss the possibility of a PV split. But first we have a stretched PV mostly in name only. Blog is now public https://t.co/Gg8N2KHLUk pic.twitter.com/V6yz7rNrV1
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 13, 2023
'Tis the season for this snowy scene in Anchorage! As of last night, 8" had fallen and it was still snowing. #akwx pic.twitter.com/u2nFv9XdmJ
— WeatherNation (@WeatherNation) December 13, 2023
December 12-15, 2022:
— WX History (@weather_history) December 13, 2023
A multi-day outbreak of 74 tornadoes affected the Southern Plains and Southeast US. 21 tornadoes were significant (EF2+), the strongest of which was a low-end EF3 that struck Farmerville, Louisiana. Three people were killed and 64 were injured.#wxhistory pic.twitter.com/cQrec8d5k1
More on the Environment and Nature:
According to NASA's Clean Air Study,the Snake Plant is so Effective in producing oxygen that if you were locked in a sealed room with no airflow,you would be able to survive with just 6-8 plants in it. NASA recommends 15 to 18 medium-to large size plants for 1,800 square home. pic.twitter.com/OwEo2g8b8W
— Tangwa Abilu.🌿🌏🌾🍀🍃.SDG's. (@AbiluTangwa) December 13, 2023
The largest beaver dam on Earth was discovered via satellite in 2007, and since then only one person has trekked into the Canadian wild to see it.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 13, 2023
The dam has formed a 17-acre lake in the middle of the forest — a testament to the beaver’s resilience.https://t.co/5DphJ1HRXU
Trees provide a rich source of food. Leaves, needles and buds provide a vital base for wildlife in spring. The splendour of the blossoms provides food for bees, bumblebees and other insects. They provide fruits, nuts, berries and seeds that keep animals safe through the winter.🌳 pic.twitter.com/ezMFKqU9Q4
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 13, 2023
Oceans absorb 89% of the heat created by manmade global warming. Caused primarily by burning fossil fuels. https://t.co/0AuejgpPN8
— Alex Hale 🌒 (@NBPTROCKS) December 13, 2023
Scientists estimate that there are around 300 wolverines left in the lower 48 states. As we face a biodiversity crisis w/ over one million species threatened w/ extinction in the coming decades, protecting the diverse range of species & their habitats is more important than ever. pic.twitter.com/HuVgoQuiHo
— Earthjustice (@Earthjustice) December 13, 2023
Trees are the largest plants that have evolved on earth: They have been around for over 350 million years. Over time, many different species of trees have evolved, more than 60,000 in total. Researchers have counted the most different species in Brazil, Colombia and Indonesia.💚 pic.twitter.com/UMPVW2b7p9
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 14, 2023
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
Holy moly! Stepped out on to the front porch to check for auroras and… wowsers! Then saw about 12 Geminid meteors - it felt a bit like an attack from space 😅 pic.twitter.com/Hl20B386yN
— Ryan Katz-Rosene, PhD (@ryankatzrosene) December 14, 2023
Another photo of that stunning December 🌅sunrise over Puget Sound, courtesy of Pete Saloutos. Taken from Bainbridge Island. #WAwx pic.twitter.com/TKYHqDDDva
— Shannon O'Donnell (@ShannonODKOMO) December 14, 2023
Sunsets were my clock for me when I was a child and I knew I had to go home. In this spirit, I wish my beloved and much appreciated fellow inhabitants of planet Earth a peaceful good evening and a blessed night surrounded by family and loved ones. May God bless you.❤️💙💚🌱☘️🌿🌲 pic.twitter.com/G6DX8fOIAd
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 13, 2023
More dogs running through snow video. pic.twitter.com/4phhdxG0hP
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 14, 2023
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 13, 2023
From science:
One day in the forest = 40 % more endogenous killer cells in the blood for 1 week.
Two days in the forest = 100% more endogenous killer cells in the blood for 1 month.
Go into the forest and fill up on terpenes that stimulate your own killer cells.🌳 pic.twitter.com/Ij3BBh6f38