It should, he said, sound “a death knell for coal and fossil fuels, before they destroy our planet”.
He called for an end to “all new fossil fuel exploration and production”, and told countries to shift fossil fuel subsidies into renewable energy.
One (2/20)
of the first tests of whether anyone is paying attention will be if somebody rips up the plans for what would be the world’s longest heated crude oil pipeline – the 1,443km (900-mile) east African crude oil pipeline (EACOP) that will run from oilfields in Uganda to the (3/20)
ocean ports of Tanzania.
If it gets built, it’s is a sure sign that the world’s leaders are not listening.
The Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide-USA (ELAW-USA) estimates that burning the 210,000 barrels of oil a day that will be transported by the pipeline will (4/20)
produce more than 34m metric tonnes of carbon annually.
This is significantly greater than the current combined emissions of Uganda and Tanzania.
So far, the Chinese national oil company, French oil giant Total, and the governments of Uganda and Tanzania are pressing (5/20)
ahead, apparently putting the money that can be made ahead of the interests of the climate.
Even on purely economic terms, it’s a terrible bargain. In 2015, the Ugandan government estimated that climate crisis damages will collectively amount to 2-4% of the country’s (6/20)
gross domestic product between 2010 and 2050.
This is about $3.2 to $5.9bn annually, losses that will exponentially rise if crude oil extraction, export and use is encouraged.
The climate crisis is costing lives and livelihoods in Uganda now, with flash floods and (7/20)
landslides taking lives and destroying public infrastructure such as roads and farmlands.
Currently, communities that lived near Lake Albert have been displaced due to increased water levels. Sealed oilwells near Lake Albert were also submerged last year.
You can see (8/20)
the same kind of damage across the African continent:
in 2019, for instance, cyclones Idai and Kenneth in southern Africa took the lives of more than 1,000 people. Millions more were left without food or basic services.
Severe droughts in east Africa in 2011, 2017 (9/20)
and 2019 destroyed crops and livestock, leaving 15 million people in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia with food and water shortages.
Yet whenever oil discoveries are made in Africa, governments move in haste to extract it without thinking of how people and broader economies (10/20)
will be affected.
Little is done to analyse and publicly share information on how much revenue will be generated from the exploitation of fossil fuels vis-a-vis the economic and social costs of biodiversity loss, climate impacts, physical and economic displacement, and (11/20)
risks to livelihoods.
Other fears about the pipeline are well documented:
physical and economic displacement; a delayed compensation process; threats to lives and livelihoods from oil spills; (12/20)
destruction of sites of spiritual value. More than 2,000 sq km of protected wildlife habitat faces significant disturbance. The governments and companies involved won’t even disclose key documents to the public to allow meaningful participation and informed consent. (13/20)
Not surprisingly, more than 1 million people have signed a global petition calling for the project to be axed.
But those numbers have to grow.
The climate crisis is, in some ways, a crisis of inertia. (14/20)
We hear reports like last week’s dramatic missive from the IPCC, and for a few hours, maybe a few days, we’re shocked.
But the oil companies count on our attention fading – because they’re focused on one thing: drilling for more. (15/20)
In a world where the temperature is rising fast (and where solar power is now the cheapest source of energy), that makes no sense.
The UN secretary general is right: (16/20)
either there’s a death knell for the fossil fuel industry or there’s a death knell for our civilisations, beginning, of course, with its poorest and most vulnerable people. (17/20)
The IPCC report was full of deeply detailed computer models and high-level physics, but its bottom line was easy to understand: (18/20)
when you find yourself in a hole, the first rule is to stop digging. If ground is broken as planned next April on this pipeline, the failure will be all of ours."
@allthecitizens "The lack of robust mitigation measures in schools puts children at greater risk of covid-19 infection and its consequences
To: • The Rt Hon Gavin Williamson MP
...
We write as researchers, parents, and educators concerned about the impact of the pandemic on (1/39)
@allthecitizens children’s education. Like you, and in agreement with the
World Health Organization
(WHO), we recognise the importance of schools staying open over the autumn and in the longer term. However, as the WHO also notes, schools must be made safe by adopting measures to (2/39)
@allthecitizens minimise transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. We are therefore writing to express our concerns about the lack of mitigations for children and educational staff, and the subsequent risk to children from covid-19 as schools reopen in England this September. We offer nine (3/39)
“Western intelligence agencies were so consumed with "counter-terrorism" that they failed to see the new dynamics at play. Certainly, that might explain the Biden administration’s assessment of the long months it would take before the regime of (1/33)
@MintPressNews Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani was at risk of falling.
Explicit assurances
The Taliban we see today is a far more complex, multi-ethnic and sophisticated coalition, which is why they have been able, at such breathtaking speed, to topple the western-installed (2/33)
They talk about Afghan political inclusion - and look to Iran, Russia, China and Pakistan for mediation, and to facilitate their place in the "Great Game".
The writing had long been written in blood on the wall for Afghanistan - there is a (3/33)
The recent ONS schools infection survey reported that case rates in school children were lower in June 2021 than they were in November 2020. They concluded that schools in England were not “hubs of infection,” in part due to measures in place (2/27)
@bmj_latest@chrischirp last summer such as frequent testing, isolation of contacts of new cases in schools, mask wearing (which continued in many schools even after 17 May 2021 when this was no longer mandatory), and low rates of covid in the community.
"The first thing I do when I get a new phone is take it apart.
I don’t do this to satisfy a tinkerer’s urge, or out of political principle, but simply because it is unsafe to operate.
Fixing the hardware, which is to say surgically removing the two or three (1/43)
@wikileaks tiny microphones hidden inside, is only the first step of an arduous process, and yet even after days of these DIY security improvements, my smartphone will remain the most dangerous item I possess.
The microphones inside my actual phone, prepped for surgery
Prior to (2/43)
@wikileaks this week’s Pegasus Project, a global reporting effort by major newspapers to expose the fatal consequences of the NSO Group—the new private-sector face of an out-of-control Insecurity Industry—
most smartphone manufacturers along with much of the world press (3/43)
"The concept of the enemy is fundamental to conspiracy thinking — and to the various taxonomies of conspiracy itself.
Jesse Walker, an editor at Reason and author of The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory (2013), offers the following (1/19)
@ggreenwald categories of enemy-based conspiracy thinking:
“Enemy Outside,” which pertains to conspiracy theories perpetrated by or based on actors scheming against a given identity-community from outside of it
“Enemy Within,” which pertains to conspiracy theories perpetrated by (2/19)
@ggreenwald or based on actors scheming against a given identity-community from inside of it
“Enemy Above,” which pertains to conspiracy theories perpetrated by or based on actors manipulating events from within the circles of power (government, military, the intelligence (3/19)