AukeHoekstra Profile picture
Feb 12 14 tweets 7 min read
If you are in for some realistic antidote to climate anxiety, read this piece!

Sometimes you read something that you would like to be yours because it is so good. This new piece by @mattyglesias is an example. I have to admit I'm a bit jealous.
🧵
slowboring.com/p/people-need-…
You should read it yourself but some tidbits.

The premise of the story:
Improbably Apocalyptic *warnings* on global warming are often mistaken for *predictions*.
This leads people to suffer anxiety and grief.
The piece starts by describing people sinking deeper and deeper into depression because they start to believe what they see and read when doom scrolling. It's a bona fide health problem as the linked @nytimes piece by @EllenBarryNYT also proves.
Then @mattyglesias makes a point we should make more often: "If you say it’s not as bad as the risk of all of humanity being wiped out in a full-scale nuclear exchange or by a large comet, you’re now the guy who is minimizing climate change."
Well, it's really not *that* bad.
Next up: dire *warnings* are not *predictions*.

Most bad stuff you read are *warnings* of things that are very unlikely to happen. A good example are articles based on RCP8.5.
A while ago an intensive twitter discussion on RCP8.5 raged (I was very vocal but @MLiebreich was the pack leader and @hausfath, @Peters_Glen and @jritch provided scientific muscle) which taught us that this highly unlikely scenario (a warning) is often used as a prediction.
As @mattyglesias correctly concludes: "Indeed, the current projections of 2.2 or 2.7 degrees are closer to 1.5 degrees than to 4.4 degrees; we are more than halfway there. This is pretty good news!"

But many climate communicators hide this fact beneath Apocalyptic warnings.
Then he treats us to some "Cognitive behavioral therapy for climate anxiety".
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive…
CBT is the most effective way to treat anxiety and depression. An important part of it is challenging destructive habits and untrue beliefs with evidence.
One bummer he doesn't mention I want to get out of the way: we really are causing the sixth mass extinction of animals
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocene_…

But will your children die?
No. Their odds are better than yours have been.
Exhibit A: Daniel Swain, a climate scientist pointing out many popular doomer claims lack an empirical basis.
Exhibit B: climate scientist Brian O'Neill pointing out we have every reason to expect humans will be more healthy and live longer in the future and there is no Mad Max scenario in the IPCC report.
Like @mattyglesias I'm not comfortable with pointing out how other people should feel. But I love the way he puts it into perspective here:
For me it is simple: we have solutions for the problems we face. If we take the long view, applying the solutions will increase both our wealth and happiness.

So not mitigating climate change is a really stupid thing to do. I want to do the smart thing and be proud of myself.
But if you disagree and think people need the threat of personal extinction to get into action,
if you think it's ok to undermine the science by exaggerating,
you should still ask yourself if you want to cause so much suffering in terms of anxiety and depression.
/end

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More from @AukeHoekstra

Feb 7
No, EVs are NOT the new 'diesel scandal' waiting to happen @BjornLomborg & @DailyMailUK

I know I should not feed the trolls but I've completely had it with Bjorn Wormtongue Lomborg

I actually study this stuff so let me set the record straight (again)
🧵
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1…
There was a time I really liked Bjorn Lomborg.

But by now his relentless attempt to sabotage anything that helps us to transition away from fossil fuels reminds me of Wormtongue, the sycophant to power in lord of the rings.
The following may seem like a rant but I study electric vehicles (EVs) at the Eindhoven University of Technology.

Getting the science right is important to me (see my pinned thread) and Bjorn constant misleading irks me.
Read 37 tweets
Jan 30
Large US dataset shows EVs catch fire 100x less often! driveteslacanada.ca/news/electric-…
Comments saying "they burn longer and are harder to put out" and "older cars burn more often and EVs are generally younger": true!

But let me add: EVs don't explode so lower chance someone gets harmed. On top of lower chance of fire.

So: fire is MUCH less of an issue with EVs.
And new solutions bring water directly to the battery. This enables ending the fire in 15 minutes or so.
I've also seen solutions by Renault that basically provide a tap opening for firemen and make the process simpler still.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 27
EV sales increased over 100% in 2021!
In 2022 a 61% growth to over 10 million vehicles is expected!

I just tweeted about the amazing growth of solar PV but with EVs we see the same pattern.
🧵
bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
I always focus on yearly exponential growth. With 61%, 2022 is expected to be a phenomenal year for EVs! But if you look at the entire period (with an average of 59%) it's actually average.

So I'm not surprised at all. Just very happy that it continues to go as can be expected.
By the way: as you can clearly see in the previous table, China is leading the world. Not only in production but also in adoption. So maybe it's only to be expected that they have most of the resource refineries and battery production. (The same is true for solar PV.)
Read 7 tweets
Jan 27
Solar PV is picking up steam again!

2018 and 2019 where timid with just 9% growth per year. But 2020, 2021 and 2022* (*expected) pick up the pace again with 22%, 27% and 25%. That is close to the average over 1977-2022 of 32% yearly growth.
about.bnef.com/blog/solar-10-…

🧵
I would like to add that @solar_chase is openly calling her team "cowards" (tongue in cheek) for being conservative. She's claiming 2021 will probably still go up (maybe even to 200 GW).

I think their prognosis for 2022-2030 is probably also conservative again.
Maybe I can remind people that I've been saying and illustrating this since 2007 by pointing out the difference between reality and the "not predictions" of the IEA. But everybody falls victim to this conservatism in order to be taken seriously.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 15
How I see #DontLookUp: an unintended self-parody of the makers on their own superficiality and uncritical acceptance of US exceptionalism.

I'm really glad that e.g. the reaction to COVID shows that we are not as dysfunctional as their Hollywood script demands.

A rant 🧵
I understand the moviemakers probably meant to satirise others but I feel they mostly parodied themselves.

The system that captured them and the training they received seems to make it almost impossible for them to engage with hard science in a meaningful way.
And I think Trump is a mad and dangerous enemy of truth but the caricature of him and his followers will only convince them you are smug & stupid. It's an easy way to get cheap laughs but will only polarize the issue further: #nothelping.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 10
Didn't believe it at first so just reproduced it myself and this is indeed how wind and solar balance each other in OECD Europe according to the @IEA. Remarkable!
It means that increasing interconnectivity can be an alternative for seasonal storage for 100% renewable electricity.
Does anybody have an explanation for why we have more wind in months with less solar? @ChristianOnRE @nworbmot @Sustainable2050 @mzjacobson
It's only logical that a meteorologist gave the best explanation I guess :-)

I knew combining wind and sun lowers the cost and that there's more wind in winter. But this picture shows an almost *perfect* complementarity in the OECD region: wow.
Read 6 tweets

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