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A new dataset released by InfluenceMap provides information on heat-trapping emissions traced to the 122 largest investor and state-owned fossilfuel companies in the world. Fossilfuels are the main driver of climate change and the terrifying effects of it that we see happening across the world.
While there is enormous potential for UN climate negotiations to transform climate action, meaningful progress has been delayed in part by the fossilfuel industry’s deceptive tactics. Last year’s COP was notable as the first to explicitly mention “fossilfuels” in the final decision document.
A new map tool from the Union of Concerned Scientists shows you where and when critical pieces of coastal infrastructure such as public housing buildings, schools and power plants are at risk of repeated, disruptive flooding due to climate change-driven sealevel rise. Photo credit: Ben Neely/MyCoast.org.
3) ExxonMobil predicted the possibility of linking rising temperatures to fossilfuels ExxonMobil researchers accurately predicted when it would become possible to attribute changes in climate to human activity. Such a constraint would clearly place a limit on the amount of fossilfuels ExxonMobil could extract, produce and market.
But given the growth of the economy, carbon emissions were projected to continuing growing steadily through 2030. In November 2021, Prime Minster Modi announced in Glasgow that India would get half its energy from renewables by 2030 as well as significantly cutting its emissions. Meeting its target will not be easy.
Two-thirds of the G20’s public finance for energy went to fossilfuels in 2019–2020. The G20 group of nations provided nearly US$200 billion in support of fossilfuels in 2021, despite the worsening impacts of the climate crisis and their pledge in 2009 to phase out “inefficient” subsidies. By Catherine Early.
For example, researchers at the Union of Concerned Scientists have directly linked fossilfuel producers’ Scope 1 and Scope 3 emissions to increases in ocean acidification , global temperature, sealevel rise and North American wildfires. So how does the fossilfuel industry think it should measure emissions?
Now the same district court has gone further, again in favor of environmental groups but now against Royal Dutch Shell (“Shell”) , the world’s largest non-state-owned fossilfuel company. In fact, Shell has the most ambitious emissions abatement plan of all fossilfuel companies , for whatever that is worth.)
Everyone will suffer greatly from sea-level rise and climate change if policymakers cede decision-making to corporate interests. PJM directs the revenues and operation of the largest fossilfuel power plant fleet (124 gigawatts), making it the largest utility in the US.
Despite formally recognizing for the first time that a transition from fossilfuel use is necessary, nations failed to agree to the fast, fair, and funded phase-out that scientists are calling for. Current pledges to the fund stand at nearly $800 million , but it is estimated that $400 billion or more will be required annually by 2030.
C, we stand to lose ocean and coastal ecosystems we depend on to sealevel rise, warming temperatures, ocean acidification and other climate impacts. There was also no formal commitment to phaseouts of all fossilfuels, and even some countries supporting phaseouts are planning to expand fossilfuel production.
Perched at 3,730 metres above sealevel in the community of Ancotanga, the Oruro solar power plant is one of the flagship projects in Bolivia’s energy transition. million barrels of oil equivalent of useful energy that fossilfuels are expected to provide in Bolivia by 2040, according to a WWF Bolivia evaluation.
Based on current national GHG emissions commitments for 2030, global temperatures will likely exceed 1.5°C To limit warming to 2°C we must rapidly accelerate climate change mitigation measures and reduce GHG emissions by 27% by 2030 and 63% by 2050. C above pre-industrial levels. F) of warming in the 21st century.
It puts the wildlife and communities that depend on the ocean at risk through impacts like ocean acidification, sealevel rise and temperature changes. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, fossilfuel production accounts for 35% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
By 2030, plastic production will contribute 1.3 This production process emits significant air and water pollution with severe health consequences for neighboring communities already bearing the brunt of climate change impacts like sealevel rise, severe storms and flooding. . redlining.)
Fossilfuels alone – coal, oil and gas – account for over 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions. The pressure on this front is equally high, as needs are expected to reach USD 671 billion annually by 2030, whereas current funding for loss and damage stands at less than USD 500 million per year, a pittance.
We are already seeing the deeply inequitable consequences of our refusal to stop burning fossilfuels all around us, and I know I’ll be hearing from people from around the world about unbelievably extreme weather events over this past year. That said, this COP is being held against the grim backdrop of our accelerating climate crisis.
Lest one thinks this disconnect is a failure of the global climate architecture, the failure lies much closer to home—in the domestic politics in the US and many other countries that continue to favor the interests of the rich and powerful , and fossilfuel companies, at the expense of the health and safety of everyone else and the planet.
Fossilfuels are the root cause of climate change, of long-standing environmental injustices, and are also frequently connected to geopolitical strife and violent conflicts. Other countries are dependent upon these fossilfuels, they don’t make themselves free of them. This is a fossilfuel war.
The Governor approved a notable slate of climate legislation with a package that includes more stringent greenhouse gas (GHG) emission targets and measures designed to reduce the state’s reliance on fossilfuels. In signing these bills, the Governor touted the state as the most aggressive actor on climate in the nation. Clean Energy.
The consequences of the climate crisis are already visible and devastating, such as rising temperatures, melting ice caps, sealevel rise, extreme weather events, droughts, floods, wildfires, biodiversity loss, food insecurity, water scarcity, displacement, conflict, disease, and death. of their projects and HBO Max in 6.4%.
Could Be Reactivated -- The Allegheny Front: New Book Looks To Climate Resilience To Ensure No One Gets Left Behind -- StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: What Can One Person Do About Climate Change? Hosts 3 Public Meetings To Gather Input On Youghiogheny River Conservation Plan Part I - Dunbar Creek To Headwaters Aug. Potter County To Sept.
A polluting fossil-fueled energy agenda Unsurprisingly, Project 2025 also pushes for more fossilfuels, with statements like ‘ Affirm an “all of the above” energy policy…’ and ‘Support repeal of massive spending bills like the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) and Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).’
And his opinion was in the next 50 years, fine dust put in the atmosphere by fossilfuel burning could screen out so much of sunlight that the average temperature could drop six degrees and trigger an ice age. You cannot have cleaner green energy projects without fossilfuel. So that was in 1971. We're not doing that.
Scavello Introduces Bill Authorizing Community Solar Projects; $2 Billion Worth Of Projects Waiting For It To Pass -- Business, Environment, Energy Groups Praise Introduction Of Bipartisan Bills Increasing Solar Energy Mandate From 0.5% Wolf, AG Shapiro To Support A Total Ban On Road Dumping Of Oil & Gas Drilling Wastewater; 240.4
The fossilfuel industry’s presence at this year’s UN climate negotiations in Baku, Azerbaijan, has been simultaneously heavy-handed and covert. Even more alarming, the fossilfuel industry’s influence at COPs is deeply entrenched and goes beyond lobbying. Obtaining high-level access But it’s not just the numbers.
Attorneys general (AGs) in the five states most vulnerable to climate change, however, are doing the exact opposite: Instead of defending their constituents, they are defending the fossilfuel industry. Here’s a roundup of what these AGs have been doing to make a bad situation worse.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated that we’re in a “ code red for humanity ” and called for an end to fossilfuel production and exploration, along with a massive transition to renewable energy, to mitigate climate change. Over the next 10 years, the fossilfuel industry in the U.S.
The plaintiffs alleged that Peabody (and a number of other fossilfuel companies) caused greenhouse gas emissions that resulted in sealevel rise and damage to their property. Nonetheless, the court reviewed both the 2030 and 2050 targets set by the prior government’s Minister and ruled on their legality.
Ninth Circuit Heard Oral Argument in California Local Government Cases; FossilFuel Companies Said Juliana Decision Supported Their Position. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments on February 5, 2020 in the appeals in California local governments’ climate change cases against fossilfuel companies.
However, to meet those goals, countries also agreed on non-binding national targets to cut – or in the case of developing countries, to curb the growth of – greenhouse gas emissions in the near term, by 2030 in most cases. Fossilfuel use must also end. target, the lower of the two Paris goals. Are we nearly there?
LA Times climate columnist Sammy Roth reread the Laudato Si encyclical , and was struck by his nuanced discussion of extreme weather and sealevel rise, and the need to phase out fossilfuels making it almost certainly the most famous climate essay ever written. Time for new ones and for the 89 percent to speak up.
A climate change-related argument rejected by the trial court—that sealevel rise projections in the Plan were too high and not based on best available science—did not appear to have been before the appellate court. The fossilfuel companies asked the court to grant only a 30-day extension.
Supreme Court denied fossilfuel companies’ petition for writ of certiorari seeking review of the Ninth Circuit’s decision reversing the district court’s 2018 denial of Oakland’s and San Francisco’s motions to remand their climate change nuisance cases to California state court. DECISIONS & SETTLEMENTS. On June 14, 2021, the U.S.
Maryland County Filed Climate Change Lawsuit Against FossilFuel Companies and Trade Group. Annapolis, a city in the county, previously filed a separate lawsuit against fossilfuel companies.) Exxon Mobil Corp. , 451071/2021 (N.Y.
National Audubon Society alleged that the rule “vastly expands potential sand mining projects in delicate coastal barriers” and further alleged that coastal barriers would become even more important due to climate change and were expected to mitigate $108 billion of sealevel rise and flooding damages over the next 50 years.
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