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Climate pledges made by countries around the world would collectively require 1.2 billion hectares (about 3 billion acres) of land – a total land area larger than the United States – to meet targets laid out in national plans, researchers found in the new study. It is simply not a feasible or advisable endeavor, according to the study, The Land Gap Report.
Land is a common element in climate schemes because carbon dioxide removed from the atmosphere and stored by forests and other ecosystems is calculated to offset emissions produced elsewhere. Restoration of degraded ecosystems would account for close to half of the land area required to meet climate pledges, but more than half would require lands that are already currently used for something else, the study authors noted.
Using those “new” lands for reforestation or other land-use change measures could displace Indigenous peoples, communities, or small farmers.
[...]
“This study reveals that countries’ climate pledges are dangerously over-reliant on inequitable and unsustainable land-based measures to capture and store carbon,” said Kate Dooley, lead author of the report.
“Clearly, countries are loading up on land pledges to avoid the hard work of steeply reducing emissions from fossil fuels, decarbonizing food systems and stopping the destruction of forests and other ecosystems,” Dooley, a researcher at the University of Melbourne, said in a statement.
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without-ado · 1 year
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COP27: World Climate Waste of Time
The climate changes, politicians do not.
l (x)(x)(x) l title & quote fr. AGO (2nd art)
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bandoura · 1 year
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Egypt forever
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perryfellow · 1 year
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I pray this Doctor is actually correct. I really do hope the synchronized relationship between carbon + global heat does not apply to the modern atmosphere. I pray that the unprecedented billions of tons of CO2 that blanket the earth can be naturally mitigated by our trees. Continued attacks on amazon rainforests, fires in the arctic, and relentless greed by elite international corporations make it harder and harder to be relaxed on this issue however. Here’s hoping that whoever our leaders are in the coming years, they can work together to diagnose an issue that affects all other issues: the health of the world in which we live. #usa #nuclearenergy #renewableenergy #amazonrainforest #chevron #humanfamily #cop27 #stephendonziger #climatechange https://www.instagram.com/p/CkqkKUCOpq7/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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bumblebeeappletree · 1 year
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11-year-old Indian climate activist Licypriya Kangujam confronted UK Minister of State for Asia, Energy, Climate and Environment Zac Goldsmith at COP27 on November 14, asking him when his government plans to release climate activists who were arrested for protesting against fossil fuels. Kangujam said Goldsmith told her that he had no idea and can’t do anything, which led her to ask, 'If he can’t do anything, why is he at COP27?’
This video was created in collaboration with Nature's Newsroom.
#Earth #Environment #ClimateCrisis #NowThis
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coochiequeens · 1 year
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“ New ActionAid research in Kenya, Rwanda, Zambia and Nigeria has found that climate change is also increasing gender-based violence and damaging women’s mental health.”
This has been a year of climate catastrophes for every corner of the globe. From floods in Pakistan and Nigeria to the worst droughts on record across the Horn of Africa, no one on the planet is insulated against our rapidly worsening climate. Among the most disproportionately affected are women and girls. Yet their story is all too often just a footnote in the news.
We know about the gendered impact of climate change from our work across the world. We have seen time and time again how women and girls are pushed to drop out of school or marry early to help manage the financial stress that families face during droughts or floods. New ActionAid research in Kenya, Rwanda, Zambia and Nigeria has found that climate change is also increasing gender-based violence and damaging women’s mental health.
As a warming planet leads to a rise in humanitarian emergencies and displacement, women and girls must not be left to pay the steepest price.
In northern Kenya, Rosemary — a former farmer whom ActionAid works with — now needs to walk several miles farther than before to find water. Her community is facing extreme drought after consecutive failed rains, with 90 percent of all open water sources in their area now dry. This increased burden and the distances she has to go put her at greater risk of violence as she needs to travel, often outside daylight hours, to areas where she has no protection.
Meanwhile, the drought and the invasion of a crop-eating worm pest have already destroyed her farm, once her main source of income. This has forced Rosemary into animal husbandry, but she faces the challenges of an unpredictable climate here too. Unable to access water and grassland, two of her cows recently died, pushing her further into financial precarity.
Farmer incomes have dropped sharply in Rosemary’s community because of the failed rains. This is leading to girls being taken out of school — and in some cases married off — to ease family expenditure and help to bring in income. In precarious times of climate stress like this, girls are 20 percent more likely to be married early than in times of stability, putting women’s rights to education and liberty at risk.
But it doesn’t have to be this way. Women and girls on the front line of the climate crisis, like Rosemary, know what actions are needed and are important agents of change. Rosemary leads a local activist network that tackles violence against women and girls and provides guidance to young women on their human rights. This support is key for women and girls navigating the knock-on impacts of climate change and drought.
Women like Rosemary are capable of building communities that are resilient to the challenges of climate change. But they need support to scale up their work and the opportunity to help decide how international, national and local climate finance is spent.
Yet, sadly, we know that the voices of the women on the front lines are not sufficiently heard in the grand halls and behind the closed doors where the big decisions are made, including at the ongoing COP27 climate change conference. This is particularly worrying in 2022 as the impacts of climate change escalate while international support for women like Rosemary remains scarce.
Industrialised nations that have contributed the most to the climate crisis are yet to deliver on their promised — yet inadequate — funding to help mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate change in the future. These failed promises, combined with the lack of finance to support climate impacts now — known as loss and damage finance — means that the odds are loaded against a funding paradigm that accounts for the additional risks and consequences women and girls face.
While the United Kingdom is increasing its financial support for climate adaptation, it has not pledged new and additional loss and damage funding to countries like Kenya, which is battling its worst drought on record.
This is unacceptable. Climate finance needs to cover reparations for the lost years of girls’ education, address women’s lost security, and compensate for their failed crop yields. We need progress on these issues at COP27, not yet another year of kicking the can down the road.
World leaders need to pay attention to stories like Rosemary’s. We need less rhetoric and a greater focus on women’s rights and actions to help them thrive and bring their communities out of poverty. Without this, the gendered injustice of climate change and the silent crisis for women and girls will only get worse.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.
By Sophie Rigg Senior Climate and Resilience Adviser, ActionAid UK
Sophie Rigg is ActionAid UK’s Senior Climate and Resilience Adviser and leads their climate policy and research work focusing on the intersection of gender justice and climate justice. She specialises in locally led and gender-just climate adaptation, climate resilience, and loss and damage. She is a board member of the Global Network for Disaster Reduction (GNDR) and on the Steering Committee of CAN-UK. Sophie is also an observer on the Climate Investment Funds.
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thenib · 1 year
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Jen Sorensen.
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Lula wants to host COP30, announces Ministry of Indigenous People
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Brazil's President-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced during his appearance at the Egyptian resort of Sharm El-Sheikh, that he will create a ministry of native peoples so that indigenous people “are not treated as bandits.”
Lula made those remarks before the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference of 2022 (COP27), where he also pledged “to put an end to the process of degradation that our forests are suffering.”
He also launched a plan for Brazil to host 30th United Nations (UN) climate conference in 2025 in the Brazilian Amazon.
The Workers' Party leader received a standing ovation from climate activists who chanted “Olé, olé, olé.... Lula... Lula...,” particularly as he pledged to wage a “very strong fight” against deforestation. “We are going to end the process of degradation that our tropical forests are undergoing,” he proclaimed. “I am here to tell all of you that Brazil is back in the world.”
“Brazil is back. It cannot be isolated as it was in the last four years. Brazil is too big,” Lula insisted at the Amazonia Legal Consortium's pavilion at COP27. The consortium brings together the nine states of the Brazilian Amazon basin.
Continue reading.
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With COP27 approaching, I thought I'd take the opportunity to post some relevant articles that may be useful if you're interested in the subject.
BBC:
A Really Simple Guide to Climate Change
What is the Paris Climate Agreement?
Is the UK on Track to Meet its Climate Targets?
What is the Egypt Climate Conference and Why is it Important?
The Guardian:
Cop27 Climate Summit: Window for Avoiding Catastrophe is Closing Fast
The NY Times:
What is COP27?
The UN:
What You Need to Know About This Years Climate Conference
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Check out the new issue of Struggle-La Lucha:
Stop gov't unionbusting against rail workers; NY trans community fights bigots & cops; Club Q shooting & fascism; Indigenous leadership in struggle; Seize social media from billionaires; Democrats show true colors with war allegiance; Cuba vs. U.S. lies; COP 27 puts Biden on hot seat; and more!
Download free PDF edition at http://struggle-la-lucha.org
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currentclimate · 1 year
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Food production is responsible for a third of all planet-heating gases emitted by human activity and a number of the signatories have been accused of environmental misdeeds and “greenwashing”. 
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The problem with the organizations targeting key historical artworks to protest climate change is that they chose to aim precisely the wrong crowd. The folks who value art are not exactly of the thoughtless variety who don't care about the planet and future generations, on the contrary. That's EXACTLY why these actions are absolutely senseless. In a human world full of ugliness, of hopelessness, art counters this by enriching it with beauty and hope. That's how art saves the world, even if an artwork is not meant to protest injustice, that doesn't mean it's meaningless. Art is one of the only evidences of our humanity, of our heart, of our organic nature, of our connection to other living beings, of our capability of achieving great things and THAT is important for future generations TOO. It's humanity's source of spirituality. What we do to our planet is wrong, but so is this. 2 wrongs don't make one right. To think that the end justifies the means is what the most atrocious people in history have agreed on. If you are capable of spray painting something that came out of someone's soul, something that GIVES our world soul, I highly doubt you are a good person, even if you don't damage it. If you want to raise awareness, I beg you to find more creative and less lazy ways to do it.
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purpleweredragon · 1 year
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All countries must withdraw from the treaty to stop unfair protection for polluters’ profits.
Exit the Energy Charter Treaty today and stop its expansion to other countries. The treaty allows coal, oil and gas corporations to obstruct the transition to net zero. Urgent climate action cannot be made slower or more expensive by fossil fuel firms.  
Over a million people across Europe have asked their governments to withdraw from the treaty. Counties including Germany, France and Spain already have. Please sign this petition to demand the UK withdraws too.
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thoughtportal · 1 year
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Pakistani human rights and land defender Ayisha Siddiqa was set to give a speech on November 17 at COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. However, when it was her turn to take the mic, she instead said, ‘I was intending to come here and share with you facts and data, and the stories of the women who have had to give birth in flood zones, of the ancestors whose graves have drowned, and I don’t think that’s what people need to hear right now.’ Siddiqa then went on to deliver a powerful poem which read in part, ‘I tell you that even our dead have drowned in their graves, and you ask me to be polite. You ask me not to blame or shame, and remember the color of my skin, the sound of my tongue, and my place in your world.’
https://unfccc-events.azureedge.net/COP27_87768/agenda
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bumblebeeappletree · 1 year
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As world leaders boarded their private jets home from Sharm El Sheikh, noticeably absent among them was youth activist Greta Thunberg, who in an interview before the conference accused world leaders and people in power of using the whole affair to grab attention, “using many different types of greenwashing.”
Reading her words, I couldn’t help but think about a group of protestors who last month grabbed the world’s attention in a more radical way than world leaders showing their faces at COP. I’m talking about SoupGate, MashedPotatoGate, and all the other protest actions that were sparked by Just Stop Oil protesters throwing a tin of tomato soup over Van Gogh’s sunflower painting in London.
In many respects the protest was a roaring success, generating international media coverage and making the front page of the New York Times. The video has been viewed almost 50 million times on Twitter alone.
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"The final outcomes demonstrate that, despite the thousands who were there to advocate for climate justice, it was the fossil fuel lobby that had most influence. As a climate justice scholar, I am deeply worried about the processes at COPs, especially given next year’s destination: Dubai. It remains to be seen what happens with the loss and damage fund, but time is running out and watered down commitments on emissions are at this stage deeply unjust and frankly dangerous."
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