“No other country in the world has ever created anything like this in the Arctic. By creating a brand new gas production center beyond the ArcticCircle, Russia has proven its leadership in the Arctic” Alexey Miller, chair of Gazprom
(source: Permafrost-affected soils and their carbon pools with a focus on the Russian Arctic, Zubrzycki et al 2014)
This is the location of #Norilsk diesel disaster, where a fuel tank sat on thawing permafrost and broke its legs, so to speak.
With marked Yamal Peninsula as main origin for gas, and an attempt of added permafrost line according to the previous pic.
Pic 1 is the Eurasian pipeline network as of 2007, with a rough permafrost line added. The export scheme is largely the same today as shown in Gazproms own Pic 2 from 2017.
Everything here all a likely methane source in leaks and flaring. And if built on permafrost, a 💣 threat.
And who's the ultimate culprit?
Like with Bolsonaro's Amazon destruction,
the EU of course. The EU, and Dr. Merkel with her Germany€First attitude and her neoclassic stance of "#NordStream2 isn't a political issue but a private enterprise." @TimmermansEU
Now some figures:
Pic 1: Of the 200bn m3 export to Europe in 2018, 58bn went to Germany.
Pic 2: All gas suppliers to Europe compared.
Pic 3: 🇩🇪isn't dependent on Gazbomb. oec.world/en/profile/cou… shows, it's actually 🇳🇴gas, at the moment. But 🇳🇴aims to decarbonize. So Gazbomb wants to take over
Pic 1: Gazbomb's gas sales to FSU states
Pic 2: Russian domestic pipeline length in 2016: 28k km as a certain source of leaks. The ones built on permafrost? Consider them a ticking CH4 bomb.
Pic 3: Eurasian gas pipeline scheme with a rough permafrost line
Pic 4: Yamal wells
The permafrost is one risk. #Norilsk
But the awe inspiring infrastructure leaks CH4 in extraction processes and transport, too. Gazbomb's own figures say, the CH4 emissions in total are 0,015% of gas produced🙄
Constantin Zerger from @Umwelthilfe found out:
A for-profit company released numbers on only 2 sites on Yamal peninsula: leaks of 99t and 17t per HOUR reuters.com/article/us-cli…
That's 88.4 million tonnes per year from these two sites alone - if they continue to leak for a year. Do they? Who knows. We only hear "0.015%" 🤷♀️
According to Global Methane Project, fossil fuel CH4 emissions are ~111 Tg/yr (top down) or ~128 (Tg/y bottom up) essd.copernicus.org/articles/12/15…
(Top Down/Bottom Up are different accounting methods.)
In a year, the two leaks alone Reuters writes about,
would amount to 88.4 Tg CH4⁉️
( I'm maths dyslexic, so please correct all figures I write, even the ones I merely quote 😁)
But if the for-profit company guesstimated right wrt 99 t and 17 t per hour as stated by Reuters, then something is odd wrt the knowledge on CH4 sinks -and ofc with Gazprom's figures.
Methane is 87x worse than CO2 for 20yrs and amplifies short term warming.
Whatever CH4 source or sinks are, IPCC has a budget for it's warming (green circly lines).
We can control🐄, rice and leaks / flaring in fossil fuel product chain. So we gotta reduce all 3 now. Today.🤷♀️
Browsing Gazbomb's webpage is awesome wrt the engineering and ingenuity of last century's Russians.
Focused on true climate protection -as opposed to greenwashing and frankly, climate sabotage- Russian genius could certainly be our saviour.
But today, they aren't.
Like EU &US.
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@MarvinTBaumann @ClimateDad77 I get your psych. thinking. But. Sit down and sketch a project plan with milestones and deadlines for keeping tech-civilisation afloat. Don't forget culture change toward solidarity: You'll find that only today's decision makers in econ & politics still ⏩
@MarvinTBaumann @ClimateDad77 can change our trajectory on time=in budget. With "today's decision makers" I really mean today's. So it doesn't matter a lot if non-decision-makers get depressed [by the truth]. It's not in their hands anymore, anyway. Covid saw to that. (That's how close we are to deadlines!)⏩
@MarvinTBaumann @ClimateDad77 On the other hand: realizing the truth in the big likelihood of a total crash soon frees up resources for also realizing what can be done today to help crash survivors. It's not the "end of the world" when tech-civilisation ends. People & rural communities can prepare but need⏩
Even renaissance societies relied on extraction, international trade and specialisation.
But rekindled societies after the collapse only have non-useful know-how at first, resulting in caveman-level of useful sophistication
– *and* again rely on fossil and wood fuel for even the most basic tasks.
I agree with Robert Harris' "Second Sleep" where only population outside metropolitan areas survive the famine and violence. How could we today help the survivors to rekindle a *sustainable* organisation?
Which cultures r likely to rekindle societal organisation beyond tribes? IMO non-urban S-America. How to bolster those future attempts today, paper knowledge caches? How to curate that knowledge for its likely usefulness? "When there's no pharma industry: medicine for dummies"...
The soft-sci troubadours sing about degrowth and doughnuts. Ballads of soft "transitions" to utopia. Risk awareness can't grow because these ballads are about a far-away time, not heeding the requirements of today's breeched planetary boundaries/budget.
I spent lotsa time deciphering the climate of the Pliocene or MIS11 and listening to ballads of "transitions" to utopia.
Assuming that this surely was what I need to know.
But neither physicists nor troubadours cover what would have raised my risk-awareness to reality-levels.
Intriguing.
A long drought prevailed AD 500ff in East Mediterranean & Arab Peninsula. Might've been in more regions but these I know of.
The 1st plague epidemic from rat fleas began in Kush/Egypt 541-549 and culled MENA & Europe.
Long droughts cause (death, war and) migration..
Did (the aftermath of) the drought fuel epidemic spread? Likely. Drought weakens states, workers flee, wars ensue, armies carry🪲everywhere.
Did Kush experience drought, too? Was the (onset of the) pandemic even caused by rats' or human behaviour that was influenced by drought?
What human or rat behaviour would trigger rat fleas to jump and infect humans?
I'd imagine you need lots of rats to increase the chances of a few infected fleas to jump. These rats need food and also be brave enough to run around in the immediate vicinity of humans.
Hm.
Intriguing is that Chile's citizens turned out to be the most risk-aware in this international Facebook survey. Of its 19mio citizens, 1094 took part in the survey and 60-70% know they'll be harmed personally by climate change.
This is the level of awareness we need!
The survey was conducted in Mar-Apr 2022, ~6 months after election and 1 month after inauguration of new left govt. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Chil…
I don't know anything of the talking points during their election. The only thing I know is, they now have a cli-sci as new EP secretary.
It might be that election campaigns were based on climate by all candidates and that this has in turn heightened the climate-awareness and the so important risk-awareness so much so that 60-70% rightly assume personal harm from climate change.
2 more awareness-factors could be