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 record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: In ‘Sick Joke’, COP29 Host Azerbaijan to Raise Gas Production
Dear Diary. The COPs or Conference of the Parties have a big problem. Host nations for these events stemming from the Paris Climate Accords should be paring down fossil fuel production instead of making plans to ramp up drilling for harmful CO2 emitting chemicals. The rest of the world is now thinking that these meetings are a joke and no wonder due to the example that host nations are giving. I ask, how as we as individuals are expected to change our lifestyles and fight against climate change when our leaders continue to look the other way from fossil fuel profiteers and their projects?
What the United Arab Emirates and now Azerbaijan and their leaders are doing are shameful examples of countries giving into the almighty dollar, raking in money to host the COPs while at the same time making plans to expand gas and oil production. Just disgusting. For more here is a recent post from Common Dreams:
In ‘Sick Joke’, COP29 Host Azerbaijan to Raise Gas Production by a Third (commondreams.org)
A photo shows a Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) construction site in Alexandroupoli, near the village of Amphitrite on December 24, 2016, in Alexandroupoli ,Greece; TAP will transport natural gas from the giant Shah Deniz II field in Azerbaijan to Europe. (Photo: Athanasios Gioumpasis/Getty Images)
In ‘Sick Joke’, COP29 Host Azerbaijan to Raise Gas Production by a Third
“Drug dealers don’t fix drug addictions, and petrostates won’t fix the climate crisis,” one campaigner said.
Jan 08, 2024
Azerbaijan, the country slated to host the next United Nations Climate Change Conference, has plans to increase its gas production by a third during the next 10 years.
The findings, released by Global Witness Monday, build on concerns about how effectively an Azerbaijan-hosted COP29 will tackle the climate crisis, given the country’s reliance on fossil fuels and its decision to appoint a former state oil company executive as president of the conference.
“Drug dealers don’t fix drug addictions, and petrostates won’t fix the climate crisis,” Dominic Eagleton, senior campaigner at Global Witness, said in a statement. “As we hurtle towards climate collapse, we’re now being asked to put our future in the hands of Azerbaijan, a petrostate that’s propped up by oil supermajors and is massively increasing its gas production.”
“We need climate policymaking to be run by climate leaders, not countries with a vested interest in keeping the world hooked on oil and gas.”
Global Witness’ analysis was based on data from business intelligence agency Rystad Energy. According to the data, fossil fuel companies including BP, TotalEnergies, Iran’s national oil company, and Russia’s largest private oil company Lukoil will invest $41.4 billion in Azerbaijani gas over the next decade, with just those four companies alone spending $16.8 billion. The full $41.1 billion would be enough to install more than 1,170 offshore wind turbines.
At the same time, fossil fuel companies will extract 411 billion cubic meters (bcm) from Azerbaijan’s gas fields over the next 10 years, which would release 781 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. That’s more than double what the United Kingdom burns in a year.
All told, Azerbaijan’s gas fields are slated to increase their output by a third from 37 bcm in 2024 to 49 bcm in 2033. Yet scientists have warned that the next decade is crucial for rapidly reducing fossil-fuel use in order to preserve the goal of limiting global heating to 1.5°C above preindustrial levels. The most recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says that, to preserve a 50% shot at the 1.5°C target, greenhouse gas emissions must fall by 43% of 2019 levels by 2030 and 60% by 2035.
The news from Azerbaijan comes after climate campaigners said the outcome of COP28, hosted by the United Arab Emirates and presided over by the head of the country’s state oil company, resulted in a deal full of loopholes for the fossil fuel industry that stopped short of promising to phase out fossil fuels.
“What a sick joke,” climate system science expert Paul Beckwith posted on social media in response to the Global Witness data. “COP29 is already a farce like COP28.”
#Cop29 host Azerbaijan to hike gas output by a third over next decade
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) January 8, 2024
What a sick joke. #Cop29 is already a farce like #Cop28 #climate #climatechange https://t.co/R338YpBS7l
Eagleton added: “We need climate policymaking to be run by climate leaders, not countries with a vested interest in keeping the world hooked on oil and gas.”
There are also human rights concerns related to Azerbaijan’s fossil fuels. Global Witness toldThe Guardian that just two BP-operated oil and gas projects had earned the country more than four times what it spent on the military since 2020. Some have said that Azerbaijan’s fossil fuel earnings are being used to fund its military campaign to reincorporate the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh region. A September invasion forced more than half of the territory’s population to flee into Armenia along a single road, in an exodus visible from space, as the “PBS NewsHour” reported at the time. The Azerbaijani government is also generally known for being corrupt and repressive, according to Global Witness.
Despite this, the European Union has looked to Azerbaijan as a substitute for Russian gas following its invasion of Ukraine. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen signed a deal with Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev in 2023 to double the country’s gas exports to Europe by 2027. In December, Aliyev said the country was “confidently moving toward the goal,” according to The Guardian.
At the same time, Azerbaijani fossil fuels are also helping to finance Russia’s war in Ukraine through the company Lukoil, which owns a 19.99% stake in the country’s Shah Deniz field as well as a share of the pipeline that moves gas from the field to Europe, Global Witness said.
Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.
Olivia Rosane is a staff writer for Common Dreams.
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:
SOUTH AMERICA HEAT WAVE:45 DEGREES
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
Rivadavia Argentina managed to touch the 45C mark
But even more remarkable the extraordinary hot nights in PARAGUAY, with MINIMUMS temperatures close to January South America record:
31.4C Filadelfia , 31.2c Mariscal Estigarribia https://t.co/VNyzz3cNug
SOUTH AMERICA HEAT WAVE
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
Yesterday the Argentina 🇦🇷 station of Ingeniero Juarez (net Sinarame, government owned) had a MINIMUM temperature of 32.1C, this is just 0.1C from the highest Min. ever recorded in January in all South America (Pampa del Infierno in 2022). https://t.co/c5zCmuPTg0
HISTORIC WARM SPELL
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
It's the beginning of an event which will rewrite world climatic history with thousands records during 2 weeks in all East Asia
Insane NIGHT temperatures of +10C in SIBERIA
MONGOLIA
+9.3C Tugrug
+4.1C Tonkhil 2200m
TAJIKISTAN
Crazy +20C at 1500m at Khovaling https://t.co/P2yWBhpH5o
Today it's another insane day with records destroyed allover Oceania and Asia.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
In NEW CALEDONIA history was rewritten
The capital Noumea with 36.8C tied its hottest temperature in history.
In INDONESIA records everyday: Today Sumba Island rose to 36C breaking its January record pic.twitter.com/dsU0fMtGCJ
Relentless record heat in Oceania and SE Asia:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
2024 highest was retouched with 47.9C at Marble Bar.
33.3C MINIMUM at Laverton is its highest minimum on record
Again,MICRONESIA and VIETNAM had their January hottest nights on record 28.3C and 28.0C. 3rd time. https://t.co/6PlXgS6AE3
Northern Hemisphere also with record heat
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
CENTRAL AMERICA
Temperatures in the coldest part of the year already touched 40C in Mexico,39C in Guatemala,38C in Honduras,37.5C in Costa Rica.
In NICARAGUA record at Juigalpa with 35.4C.
Widespread records in the Caribbeans pic.twitter.com/9TIEdF3GqH
Here is more brand-new December and 2023 climatology:
December 2023 in #Cuba had an average temperature of 23.6C which is 0.6C above normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
Monthly records beaten:
33.2 San Juan
33.0 Guira de Melena
33.0 Santiago de las Vegas
31.8 Bainoa
2023 ended as record warmth.
Map by Insmet. pic.twitter.com/dGyUzJJitU
December 2023 in #Spain had an average temperature of +7.5C ,+0.8C above normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
Canary and Balearic Islands were particuarly warm.
Average precipitation was 33.4mm ,less than half of normal.
Balearic Islands had just 11% of normal rainfalls. https://t.co/tq8fG4hCr6
December 2023 in #Lithuania had an average temperature of +0.1C which is +1.2C above climate normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 11, 2024
The average amount of precipitation was 71.4 mm (+30% of normal).
So, the cold anomalies were in Scandinavia+Estonia, while Latvia and Denmark were average and Lithuania above. pic.twitter.com/iMc0JZiQBr
Here is More Climate News from Thursday:
(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.)
Our new (@Lijing_Cheng et al) ocean heat content estimates are out. The 2023 values are yet a new record (though the annual increment is small than past two years, likely because of El Nino, which is associated with a release of heat from ocean to atmosphere) https://t.co/kc1SjjhHqZ
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) January 11, 2024
Delighted to hear that my paper with @rahmstorf & @NaomiOreskes, which showed Exxon predicted global warming with breathtaking accuracy years before it attacked climate science & scientists, was the second most talked-about climate change article of 2023! https://t.co/fqrUzNveFx
— Geoffrey Supran (@GeoffreySupran) January 11, 2024
2023 was the hottest year on record for our oceans. Unfortunately, we now say this every year. 🥹
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 11, 2024
+ Data: https://t.co/aEIvbYc60q
+ New study (@AASjournal, #OpenAccess): https://t.co/oJpAlV32N8 pic.twitter.com/lNNq6gls9w
Why was 2023 so warm?
— Dr Sam Burgess 🌍🌡🛰 (@OceanTerra) January 12, 2024
The particularly large anomalies in the final four months of 2023 are associated with significant contributions from both ocean and land, primarily from the tropics (over ocean) and the northern extratropics (over land).@CopernicusECMWF @ECMWF pic.twitter.com/OBfRDIvGBA
And the 2023 monthly data is in on Climate Reanalyzer! 2023 was the hottest year globally, but *in Canada*, 2010 still holds the record as the warmest year… What will 2024 bring? pic.twitter.com/Pty64UyiDV
— Ryan Katz-Rosene, PhD (@ryankatzrosene) January 11, 2024
El Niño is expected to continue for the next several seasons, with ENSO-neutral favored during April-June 2024 (73% chance). An #ElNino Advisory remains in effect. https://t.co/5zlzaZ1aZx pic.twitter.com/6bfI1PcrmC
— NWS Climate Prediction Center (@NWSCPC) January 11, 2024
My review of Hannah Ritchie's 'Not the End of the World'
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) January 11, 2024
'Being the first generation to build a sustainable planet is an opportunity, but it’s not inevitable.@_HannahRitchie @MichaelEMann https://t.co/atIcAYJOVB
We all know human caused climate change is heating the planet. Along with that moisture is increasing. Left: 2023 dewpoint change compared to the middle 20th century (red = more). Right: 2023 column water vapor content compared to middle 20th century (blue/green = more). pic.twitter.com/8CSl0Alcxz
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) January 12, 2024
Yesterday's global SST was 6.13σ above the 1982-2011 mean, down slightly after hitting a record high of 6.23σ the day before. pic.twitter.com/driftEeXnO
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 11, 2024
‘Astounding’ ocean temperatures in 2023 supercharged ‘freak’ weather
— Damian Carrington (@dpcarrington) January 11, 2024
– oceans absorb 90% of the heat trapped by human-caused carbon emissions and 2023 saw another new record set, data shows#climatecrisis
Story by mehttps://t.co/3ezyLcWo6G
Q&A: Climate tipping points have put Earth on ‘disastrous trajectory’, says new report | @AyeshaTandon w/comment from Tim Lenton @dvdmckay @TomPowly @ManjanaM
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) January 11, 2024
Read here: https://t.co/IGZ8SZfAdv pic.twitter.com/IH6wx1Hcee
"We warn of potential collapse of natural and socioeconomic systems in such a world where we will face unbearable heat, frequent extreme weather events, food and fresh water shortages, rising seas, more emerging diseases, and increased social unrest and geopolitical conflict.… pic.twitter.com/S6W4wAJA5o
— Roger Hallam (@RogerHallamCS21) January 10, 2024
This is a #ClimateEmergency. We desperately need a rapid phaseout of fossil fuels for the future of a livable planet.#ClimateAction NOW.https://t.co/pGf7BId5Em
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) January 10, 2024
ICYMI
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) January 12, 2024
Dutch Caribbean islanders sue Netherlands over climate changehttps://t.co/1WJ2ex9dvM
More from the Weather Department:
WATCH the dramatic moment a waterfront building collapsed into the water yesterday, as strong waves from #Finn lashed Malden Island, in Georgetown, Maine. pic.twitter.com/g5hIyuecaZ
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 11, 2024
A brutal arctic blast will move into the US over the next several days with wind chills as cold as -60°F in North Dakota and Montana with temperatures up to 70 degrees below normal.
— Colin McCarthy (@US_Stormwatch) January 12, 2024
Negative wind chills could reach as far south as central Texas and the Deep South 🥶 pic.twitter.com/awcK5QR9RB
This storm is going to show its muscle as the upper level trough develops a negative tilt and causes the surface system to explosively deepen. #WINTER #blizzard @foxweather pic.twitter.com/TEXw5KhfED
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) January 11, 2024
Here we go AGAIN Friday! But this time, the upper trough is shaped much more favorable for a large-scale #tornado outbreak, in my opinion. When you bring aspects of Great Plains outbreaks to the East, like a dry line feature/strong EML with elongated trough/negative tilt – WATCH… pic.twitter.com/3nq4FV19WH
— Reed Timmer, PhD (@ReedTimmerAccu) January 10, 2024
After Midwest BLIZZARD (starting Saturday for Chicago) temperatures plummet across the Midwest. It will look like a scene from the Day after Tomorrow. So Chiberia will need to be used for Chicago. Temperatures could stay around or below 0F for a couple days as bitter cold… pic.twitter.com/YE5I5PjLKL
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) January 11, 2024
Blizzard conditions caused travel trouble for semi-trucks and vehicles in the Des Moines, Iowa, area on Tuesday. Nearly a foot of snow fell in parts of central Iowa from the storm. #IAwx pic.twitter.com/sXiZaDXxdm
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 10, 2024
Winter Storm #Gerri has triggered blizzard warnings for the Cascade and Olympic Mountains…
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 10, 2024
This hasn’t been done in over a decade😳 pic.twitter.com/dyIrWO8KEq
An updated Day 3-7 Hazards Outlook has been issued. https://t.co/VBxTZCpCic pic.twitter.com/1YfDwqzxuR
— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) January 10, 2024
Here is the ensemble mean from @weatherbell for the EURO. High impact blizzard Friday and Saturday. pic.twitter.com/ZidPUZPYsQ
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) January 10, 2024
Deja Vu. Similar look here later this Friday on a system brewing tomorrow. Big winds again for the NE and some rains. Storms in the south. Big snow on backside. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/HjoKEMVHaP
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) January 11, 2024
#ThursdayMorning Reading: #Ocean – "Tides around 7 feet were expected to arrive in the Bay Area on Tuesday and continue through Saturday" #SFBay Area flood advisory issued for this week as king tides return https://t.co/xOv8Y5U9xI via @sfchronicle
— Silicon Valley North (@CCLSVN) January 11, 2024
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
The U.S. is already drowning in record oil and gas extraction.
— Vanessa Nakate (@vanessa_vash) January 11, 2024
Now, the American oil lobby is spending billions to tell the American public about why they need to drill for even more. https://t.co/lMeGJNUJ7I
It’s working. No surprise. https://t.co/2rU7m6C4qI
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) January 11, 2024
Yes, wind turbines kill birds.
— Sammy Roth (@Sammy_Roth) January 11, 2024
But fracking is a lot worse for birds. Even before the climate change part.
I looked at a new study comparing avian harm from building wind farms to drilling oil & gas wells. The difference is stark. My @latimes column: https://t.co/2QL6bkBiWu
Labour will be taking a risk sticking by its £28bn green energy plan. It should do it anyway | Larry Elliott https://t.co/XqaJjQlvIV
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 11, 2024
Installation of rooftop solar panels in UK hits 12-year high in 2023 https://t.co/pHmSxHQvYa
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 11, 2024
Dutch CO2 emissions per kWh of electricity halved in 6 years time!
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) January 11, 2024
Much less coal, much more renewables (50% now).
By @BM_Visser pic.twitter.com/AOiKGKz9WK
Renewable Energy Tsunami! An historic 510 GW of renewable capacity was added in 2023! That's 50% more than the ~340 GW added in 2022.
— John Raymond Hanger (@johnrhanger) January 11, 2024
IEA says total global RE capacity is on track to be 2.5X greater by 2030. And IEA has historically underestimated wind and solar growth. pic.twitter.com/FTMWR2W679
Renewables are growing so fast @IEA has had to, again, revise its forecast – up an incredible 33% in 1 year
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) January 11, 2024
Analysts are having a seriously hard time keeping up with what's going on: an exponential expansion of renewables everywhere, all at oncehttps://t.co/PAVwbZKbMx #climate pic.twitter.com/l1OcgbEA3r
More on the Environment and Nature:
Evidence grows of air pollution link with dementia and stroke risk https://t.co/8l31RVx1Vp
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 12, 2024
Where #Norway leads, many others will follow
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 11, 2024
Norway will go down in history as the first nation in world to begin the process of destroying the deep sea ocean untouched for millions of years
Norway will forever be associated with death and destruction of pristine ocean life https://t.co/b3QbKlmjpV
Planting trees in cities is good for people, good for the economy and an important answer to the #climatecrisis.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) January 11, 2024
We have solutions, implement them. #ActOnClimate#ClimateEmergency #ClimateAction #Renewables #reforestation #nature #rewiliding #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/y4dJ1wMkDi
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 11, 2024
Nature is worth more than we assume!
If our currencies were backed not by gold but by trees, I think overnight our millionaires and billionaires would suddenly become forest owners and reforestation would proceed at a rapid pace.
Just a mention.💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/C5Yq3a7Two
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
Amazing https://t.co/CHfJ7IdxBV
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) January 12, 2024
Watch, relax, reflect
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 10, 2024
A quick virtual stop for the day to calm down. Have a blessed rest of the day. ❤️💙💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/GZrarukhb6
On the last working day of the week, a wonderful good morning and a blessed day, accompanied by respect and kindness I wish my beloved and much appreciated fellow inhabitants of planet Earth. Stay healthy and kind, enjoy life. May God bless you. ❤️💙💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/kYE1AT0XIm
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 12, 2024