The main purpose of this ongoing blog is 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: Science Behind the Question Is Global Warming Accelerating?
Dear Diary. This year will be the hottest year temperature average wise for the globe in human history. What’s remarkable about 2023 is that temperature averages spiked without the current strong El Niño peaking causing some climate scientists to think that global warming is accelerating. But is it?
The year 2023 found two main climate scientists, Dr. Michael Mann and Dr. James Hansen, pitted against each other in a debate about how fast the globe is warming. I welcome such a scientific discussion and is the only such debate I will offer on this site. The years between 2024-2030 will be critical to see whether or not we can stymie carbon pollution such that global temperature averages can remain slightly below +1.5°C above preindustrial conditions and certainly below the +2.0°C mark. Right now, I can’t tell whether Dr. Mann or Dr. Hansen will be correct, but I have big reservations questioning whether or not we can stay below +1.5°C for the long term.
While El Niño may play some role in the remarkable warmth of the global sea surface temperature, the temperatures are so many standard deviations above normal that even El Niño can’t provide the entire explanation. pic.twitter.com/YRzgJzGx8C
— Randall Gates (@rgatess) December 26, 2023
Good God. pic.twitter.com/ptok1qOqWB
— Edgar McGregor (@edgarrmcgregor) December 26, 2023
Here are more details from the Washington Post. For a look at charts included in their article, which I haven’t copied, hit the following link:
Global warming was predicted to accelerate. It may be happening now – The Washington Post
Is climate change speeding up? Here’s what the science says.
This year’s record temperatures have some scientists concerned that the pace of warming may be accelerating. But not everyone agrees.
By Chris Mooney and Shannon Osaka
December 26, 2023 at 6:30 a.m. EST
Orange-tinged smog from the record-setting wildfires that ravaged Canada shrouds the New York City skyline in June. (Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images)
For the past several years, a small group of scientists has warned that sometime early this century, the rate of global warming — which has remained largely steady for decades — might accelerate. Temperatures could rise higher, faster. The drumbeat of weather disasters may become more insistent.
And now, after what is poised to be the hottest year in recorded history, the same experts believe that it is already happening.
In a paper published last month, climate scientist James E. Hansen and a group of colleagues argued that the pace of global warming is poised to increase by 50 percent in the coming decades, with an accompanying escalation of impacts.
According to the scientists, an increased amount of heat energy trapped within the planet’s system — known as the planet’s “energy imbalance” —will accelerate warming. “If there’s more energy coming in than going out, you get warmer, and if you double that imbalance, you’re going to get warmer faster,” Hansen said in a phone interview.
Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist with Berkeley Earth, has similarly called the last few months of temperatures “absolutely gobsmackingly bananas” and noted, “there is increasing evidence that global warming has accelerated over the past 15 years.”
But not everyone agrees. University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann has argued that no acceleration is visible yet: “The truth is bad enough,” he wrote in a blog post. Many other researchers also remain skeptical, saying that while such an increase may be predicted in someclimate simulations, they don’t see it clearly in the data from the planet itself. At least not yet.
The Washington Post used a data set from NASA to to analyze global average surface temperatures from 1880 to 2023.
The record shows that the pace of warming clearly sped up around the year 1970.Scientists have long known that this acceleration stems from a steep increase in greenhouse gas emissions, combined with efforts in many countries to reduce the amount of sun-reflecting pollution in the air. But the data is much more uncertain on whether a second acceleration is underway.
Between 1880 and 1969, the planet warmed slowly — at a rate of around 0.04 degrees Celsius (0.07 degrees Fahrenheit) per decade. But starting aroundthe early 1970s, warming accelerated — reaching 0.19 degrees C (0.34 degrees F) per decade between 1970 and 2023.
That acceleration isn’t controversial. Prior to the 1970s and 1980s, humans were burning fossil fuels — but also were releasing huge amounts of air pollution, or aerosols.Sulfate aerosols are lightly colored particles that have the ability to temporarilyoffset part of the warming caused by fossil fuels. They reflect sunlight back to space themselves,and also influence the formation of reflective clouds.
The more aerosols in the air, the slower the planet will heat up: a trade-off that Hansen calls a “Faustian bargain.” The idea is that because the aerosol pollutants have dangerous health effects on people, eventually societies decide to clean them up — causing dramatic warming to reveal itself in the process.
In the early and mid-20th century, developed countries were so heavily polluted that the world was warming slowly. “This was the era of the London fogs and of very extreme pollution in the U.S.,” said Gabi Hegerl, a climatologist at the University of Edinburgh. A recent study in the Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, for instance, found that in the 1980sthese particles offset approximately 80 percent of climate warming.
Since the 1970s and 80s, however, the influence of aerosol pollution has leveled off, thanks in part to policies like the U.S. Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. As the figure above shows, at the same time, greenhouse gas emissions have climbed— leaving aerosols unable to keep up. The result is a planet that is warming much faster now than in the first half of the 20th century.
But the data is murkier when it comes to whether the pace of warming over the past few decades has quickened even more — an increase that could accelerate the wildfires, floods, heat waves and other impacts around the globe. It may require more years of evidence to clear the statistical hurdles that climate science demands.
“I think we probably need maybe three or four more years” of data, said Chris Smith, a climate scientist at the University of Leeds. “It’s just a bit too early right now.”
London circa 1900, a time when the world was warming more slowly. (Reinhold Thiele/Getty Images)
A view from Hollywood of a smoggy downtown Los Angeles in 1995. (Donaldson Collection/Getty Images)
Scientists are wary, in part, because some had reached the opposite conclusion roughly a decade ago. Back then, a few scientists and many political commentators suggested that the rate of climate change had stalled orwas slowing down. The case for what some called a warming “hiatus” was never especially strong — and in retrospect it does not appear that the rate of warming substantially changed — but it serves as a cautionary note about declarations that warming is getting faster or slower.
To see why matters are currently ambiguous, consider the following “trend of trends” figure, based on an analysis by Mark Richardson, a climate scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory who published a statistics paper last year that found that an acceleration of warming is not yet clearly detectable.
Richardson looked at each 30-year trend in the NASA temperature record, starting with the period from 1880 to 1909 and ending with the period from 1994 to 2023. Higher values indicate higher rates of global warming. Here, we show the result from the period between 1941 and 1970 onward, to better tease out how the rate of warming changed in the second half of the 20th century, and whether it is still changing now:
Click this link to see the chart: Global warming was predicted to accelerate. It may be happening now – The Washington Post
While there is a hint of an increasing warming rate at the very end of the record, it is nowhere nearly as pronounced as the shift since 1970. This helps explain why many scientists are remaining noncommittal, for now, on acceleration.
“The temperature near the Earth is only a thin layer, and it’s easy for the temperatures to swing about a lot,” Richardson said. For this reason, it takes longer for scientists to be sure that a change is outside what you would normally expect, he said.
But some scientists believe that the temperature data is simply not yet showing an impending acceleration.
Hansen argues that recent changes in aerosols will cause a strong increase in the warming rate in just the next few years. In 2020, the International Maritime Organization instituted a rule requiring a substantial reduction in the sulfur content of fuel oil. Sulfate aerosol pollution from ocean shipping plunged.
Much of the current debate over whether warming is getting faster turns on the consequences of these maritime changes, which have the potential to affect how much heat is being absorbed over enormous stretches of the world’s oceans. Hansen and his co-authors argue that the change in ship emissions is contributing to a major increase in the Earth’s energy imbalance — the extra amount of heat that is staying within the Earth system rather than escaping to space. But not all scientists agree that the pollution regulations for ocean-going vessels have had such an outsize impact.
Hansen acknowledges that the global surface temperature data, alone, isn’t presenting an entirely clear picture of acceleration yet – but he predicts that it will be soon, as temperatures spike much further in the current El Niño.
“There won’t be any argument [by] late next spring, we’ll be way off the trend line,” Hansen said.
Some climate models also predict an acceleration of warming in the years to come, as aerosols decline. “While there is increasing evidence of an acceleration of warming, it’s not necessarily ‘worse than we thought’ because scientists largely expected something like this,” said Hausfather.
Most agree that it’s too early to tell if the second acceleration is underway. “Trying to estimate the underlying rate of warming from a short time period is really hard,” said Andrew Dessler, a climate scientist at Texas A&M University.
“Just because you get a trend that looks like it’s really rapid — that doesn’t tell you what the underlying rate of warming is.”
By Chris Mooney Chris Mooney is a Pulitzer Prize winning reporter covering climate change, energy, and the environment. He has reported from the 2015 Paris climate negotiations, the Northwest Passage, and the Greenland ice sheet, among other locations, and has written four books about science, politics and climate change. Twitter
By Shannon Osaka Shannon Osaka is a climate reporter covering policy, culture, and science for The Washington Post. Before joining The Post, she was a climate reporter at the nonprofit environmental outlet Grist. Twitter
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:
Another crazy warm day in EUROPE with temperatures which have nothing to do with winter: 22.4C in France,19C in Austria,24C on the Turkish Black Sea coast,18C in Moldova,widespread >20C in the Balkans including
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
another new December record in SERBIA with
21.3C Negotin https://t.co/q1NQtASefc
BRAZIL is again with another heat wave with temperatures above 40C in some States and more December records falling
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Some Christmas Day high temperatures include:
41.0 Ibotirama ,Bahia State
40.4 Sao Joao , Piaui State
39.5 Ze Doca,Maranhao State breaks the monthly record again https://t.co/9dBcLTi7vM
Historic heat in CHILE.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 25, 2023
Temperature reached an incredible 37.8C at San Pedro de Atacama at 2300m asl. Which is among the highest temperatures ever recorded in the world at such altitude. https://t.co/ABB4Mpk92o
Some more exceptional numbers of the incredibly warm 25 December in Central Asia.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
TAJIKISTAN
22.2C Pendzikent 1000m asl
KAZAKHSTAN
20.3 Aul Turara 809m asl
KYRGYZSTAN
19.6 Tokmak 816m asl
Those places should be freezing, those are temperatures more typical of end of September. https://t.co/r2oVoQp7tD
After recording the latest first -50C in climatic history (tied with 2022), the Greenland Summit Camp Station cooled up sharply in the past days.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Today it bottomed at -59.8C,thus overtaking Siberia as the lowest temperature so far in Northern Hemisphere this season. pic.twitter.com/6EacQIUHwe
Harsh Heat wave in the French Pacific territory of NEW CALEDONIA.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Today the temperature reached up to 37.1C at La Tontouta and 36.0C in the capital Noumea which breaks its December Max. record.
Yesterday monthly record also at Bouloparis with 36.1C pic.twitter.com/pRblqAzhB4
Agalega again !
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Today the tiny island in the Indian Ocean belonging to MAURITIUS rose to 35.4C, its hottest day in climatic history. https://t.co/QnsXiioqWe
2023 STATISTICS -part 4
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Hottest station in the Northern Hemisphere
Matam (Senegal) average temperature: 32.3C
Hottest station in the Southern Hemisphere
Surabaya Perak (Indonesia) average temperature: 29.7C pic.twitter.com/fvp6ClZES5
2023 STATISTICS part. 3-EXTREME TEMPERATURES
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 26, 2023
Northern Hemisphere Highest:53.9C Stovepipe Wells (USA) 16 July
NH Lowest:-62.7C Tongulah (Russia) 18 January
SH Highest:49.3C Onslow Airport (Australia) 14 January
SH Lowest:-83.2C Concordia (Antarctica) 25 July
NYC is averaging 5.2° F warmer than normal so far in December, with today likely to be more than 10° F warmer than normal and the next five days averaging 10-13° F warmer than normal on all guidance.
— John Homenuk (@jhomenuk) December 26, 2023
Any doubt or debate about whether or not this is a torch should now be over. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/aYsMZ16QQs
Here is More Climate and News from Tuesday:
(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.)
2023. It’s been a year. In fact, it was THE HOTTEST YEAR in Earth’s recorded history.
— Pattrn (@pattrn) December 26, 2023
And that’s not all.
We’ve had floods, fires, hurricanes and a record number of billion dollar disasters in the US: 25!
Let's look back at some of 2023's biggest events, starting in January. pic.twitter.com/6dRb2IeIaV
"The Amazon rainforest experienced its worst drought on record in 2023. Many villages became unreachable by river, wildfires raged and wildlife died. Some scientists worry events like these are a sign that the world's biggest forest is fast approaching a point of no return." https://t.co/L7TL7Tjb9O
— Laurie Garrett (@Laurie_Garrett) December 26, 2023
Faster than forecast, #climate impacts trigger tipping points in the Earth system
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 26, 2023
"Research has confirmed that tipping points & cascades are already occurring, not at 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius of warming, but right now"#ClimateCrisishttps://t.co/VP04lzQKSI
Graph of the Week: Sea Surface Temperatures are 2023's Ominous Signature https://t.co/hLexweuCqv pic.twitter.com/grARRm0Pce
— Peter Sinclair (@PeterWSinclair) December 26, 2023
📈 422.24 ppm #CO2 in the air for the planet in the 51st week of 2023 📈 Up from 419.05 one year ago📈 @NOAA Mauna Loa data: https://t.co/CkSjvjkBfQ 🌎 https://t.co/DpFGQoYEwb distribution links: https://t.co/idlRE62qB1 & https://t.co/NnwgaBoCCa 🌎 pic.twitter.com/blCK1Lq8CH
— CO2_Earth (@CO2_earth) December 26, 2023
ICYMI – the latest monthly observations of carbon dioxide (CO₂) and methane (CH₄)… 🥹
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 26, 2023
For more data/info: https://t.co/UFCoZRMQqo pic.twitter.com/P5mfchlqJu
And now, back to our regularly scheduled programming – Temperature anomalies over the last month (left), 3 months (center), and 12 months (right) in the Southern Hemisphere…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 26, 2023
Data from https://t.co/e7aUaffEik pic.twitter.com/gqdyMfaozV
The #ClimateCrisis by Numbers
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 25, 2023
"The #IPCC has concluded that acting on the #ClimateEmergency is not being restricted by a lack of scientific knowledge or technological options, but by politics and fossil fuel interests"#ClimateActionNow
https://t.co/8v7EKdVWMR
Copernicus: Canada produced 23% of the global wildfire carbon emissions for 2023 https://t.co/6auGzhdvIKhttps://t.co/vw6xrNCv08
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) December 26, 2023
Take action for farmers and our planet! The #2023FarmBill is our moment to support agricultural communities while fighting the #climatecrisis. Join us and demand a cleaner, greener future! #SupportFarmershttps://t.co/J2MLs74iLb
— Climate Reality (@ClimateReality) December 26, 2023
The science is clear, at 2°C of global heating, 53% of the 28 European resorts examined would be at very high risk of a scarce amount of snow.https://t.co/oXT8t9nf88 pic.twitter.com/YDZvQuaE1M
— Jake Reyna (@iJakeReyna) December 26, 2023
2023 was a watershed year for the #ClimateCrisis
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 26, 2023
"Next year, we should expect more climate-related disasters, especially as El Niño intensifies"
"Expect more wildfire, more floods, more intense droughts”#ClimateEmergency
https://t.co/AsBsAjFSMC
Governments, corporations and other greenhouse gas emitters are facing lawsuits and being held accountable for causing climate harm.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) December 27, 2023
Climate litigation cases are growing worldwide, according to a UNEP report issued earlier this year: https://t.co/fmNX3Ii0K9 #YearInReview pic.twitter.com/4D3CrDiLes
My appearance yesterday on CNN! Thank you to climatealert for posting. Please give this one a like and share. https://t.co/UzcqnIuf5L
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 26, 2023
The best climate books of 2023 — and the titles we’re excited for in 2024 https://t.co/SUcxvCDEVJ
— Jeff Goodell (@jeffgoodell) December 26, 2023
#OurFragileMoment is available as both audiobook and e-book: https://t.co/hzo0ECnbbF https://t.co/c1812yMyy3
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 26, 2023
Remember – the wildfires, the droughts, floods, heatwaves happening across the world are within "safe" climate change (1.2°C warming). We are on course to double that.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 26, 2023
No time to waste. Break free from fossil fuels. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/VQQJeX3NtQ
"We are all paying the price for a boiling planet".
— Robert Redmayne Hosking 🔥🌍🔥 (@rhosking252) December 26, 2023
It doesn't discriminate…… wherever you live, no matter how remote a place your community is in…..it will touch you.
We still have so much to put in place to end it…….and only by being totally committed, can we do it. pic.twitter.com/d7mFsTGvjH
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
California is putting solar panels over some of its aqueducts—a solution that can save water while generating clean energy. The first of its kind in the US.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 26, 2023
We have so many solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables pic.twitter.com/OXsISfA1tp
Excellent article here from @GeorgeMonbiot
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 25, 2023
"Carbon capture and storage has been the magic fix for #ClimateBreakdown promised by successive UK governments for 20 years – and never delivered"#ClimateCrisis #EnergyTransition https://t.co/AsjZw5rTGd
Net electricity consumption in the Netherlands grew rapidly until 2008. Then it stagnated and even decreased a bit. Looks like we'll have another decrease this year to ~106 TWh, roughly the level of 20 years ago. pic.twitter.com/S8YAxvdsaw
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) December 26, 2023
How cool is this #Florida’s first floating solar farm
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 26, 2023
"The floating solar pilot is part of Duke Energy’s Vision Florida program, which is testing other renewable projects as well, such as #greenhydrogen and battery #energy storage"#RenewableEnergyhttps://t.co/wUE6hzxDwn
More from the Weather Department:
Which U.S. county was "hurricane-coned" the most in 2023? How much damage did hurricanes wreak versus severe weather? The answers to these and other "what the ???" questions may surprise you. @CC_Yalehttps://t.co/Ggpm1hBmGS
— Bob Henson (@bhensonweather) December 26, 2023
From powerful hurricanes and tornadoes to the deadliest wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023. https://t.co/agUcfMAz4y pic.twitter.com/zWY6TAH57U
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 26, 2023
Heavy snow and dangerous winds from Winter Storm #Donovan are hitting the Northern Plains hard.
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) December 26, 2023
We’re LIVE monitoring ongoing threats and impacts. pic.twitter.com/4oztFrW4WT
Some of the Ice Storm Warnings stay in effect till tomorrow night. Some of the Blizzard Warnings stay in affect till early morning Wednesday. https://t.co/t565rpTswp
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) December 26, 2023
🌧️ A storm packing heavy rain and flooding in the East through midweek will be followed by colder air, and for some, the first snowflakes of the season. https://t.co/YH3cViNovz pic.twitter.com/CnbofVNmT6
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 26, 2023
I go out on a long but thin limb trying to predict the many machinations of the #PolarVortex, SSW or not, split or displacement? Adding to the degree of difficulty I try to predict the impact on US, Europe & Asia weather. Blog now available for early look: https://t.co/WqtIEhQkCt pic.twitter.com/Fjho3QOXQW
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 26, 2023
Sudden stratospheric warming: compare the current location of the polar vortex (left) with the forecast in 2 weeks (right).
— Ben Noll (@BenNollWeather) December 26, 2023
A displaced/elongated vortex is shown over Europe & North America.
Weather impacts: cold air building across Europe during January & eventually the USA 🐻❄️ pic.twitter.com/RScb5GUFBF
And as expected, the newest extended GEFS run marks a significant adjustment towards an early January SSW compared to the prior run.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) December 26, 2023
Quite impressively, this run’s IQR is almost entirely below that of the previous run: https://t.co/Dk6iiqzFrH pic.twitter.com/mgQpv497FZ
[Dec.26] The number of mid-latitude cyclones in the #GulfofMexico increases during #ElNiño winters because of the persistence and strength of the #subtropicaljet and the presence of mean cyclonic circulation at the upper levels over the Gulf. pic.twitter.com/368232CGO6
— NHC_TAFB (@NHC_TAFB) December 26, 2023
Recently, the Alps have been hit by three successive Atmospheric Rivers (AR) in the span of less than a month, bringing heavy rain, high-elevation snow and flooding. The Isère River in Grenoble, France, my hometown, experienced 3 distinct rounds of significant flooding during… pic.twitter.com/eUdSgRBUQn
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) December 26, 2023
December 26, 2015:
— WX History (@weather_history) December 26, 2023
An outbreak of thirteen tornadoes struck the Southern Plains. The strongest twister from the event was an EF4 that devastated parts of Garland and Rowlett, TX. Nine of the 13 fatalities occurred in vehicles that were thrown from a highway bridge.#wxhistory pic.twitter.com/TUVDKYjkgW
Wild video from the Outlaw archive of the Pilger, Nebraska EF-4 Tornado on June 16, 2014!
— Live Storm Chasers (@LiveStormChaser) December 26, 2023
LSC/Outlaw Chasers
Randy Hicks & Lisa McGeough pic.twitter.com/8SBHiFWITS
More on the Environment and Nature:
Before you hit click on that boxing day deal remember we have oceans of waste. Amazon’s plastic packaging waste alone could encircle the globe 500 times: https://t.co/QqVFhbPvJH. We need to do better.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 27, 2023
Use less, buy less, waste less.#ActOnClimate #climate pic.twitter.com/RYgaBQsx9z
Indigenous activists are risking their lives for butterflies
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) December 26, 2023
In Central Mexico’s forests, armed community members defend an iconic butterfly from cartel-backed logging.https://t.co/WPTIAJr5Zh
Road Hazard
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 26, 2023
Evidence Mounts on the Toxic Cocktail of #Pollution from Tires
"Tire emissions are a significant source of air and water pollution and may be affecting humans as well as #wildlife"@Animal_Watch @Team4Nature
https://t.co/A5aaHy0xGh via @YaleE360
Spanish minister hails deal to save Andalucía wetlands as a model for green transition https://t.co/ouDMlv9uFA
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) December 27, 2023
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
Cool shot of Gulf fog building up along the beaches of Marco Island today in Southwest Florida. Another round of fog tonight into Wednesday morning. Credit: @WINKNews viewer Andre F. pic.twitter.com/TeXqV6P4I5
— Matt Devitt (@MattDevittWX) December 27, 2023
With a dear evening greeting from home, I wish my beloved and much appreciated fellow inhabitants of planet Earth a wonderful, peaceful and harmonious good evening and a blessed night. Stay kind and healthy and may God bless you.❤️💙💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/hmnT2sHzxH
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 26, 2023