Kinnakeet
Well-Known Member
How old are these retards did anyone ever ask them about al gores prediction about FLA being under water by 2012 if something wasnt done while he flies around in lear jets and has electric power to his home,
Coal powered electric plants are a lot less pollutant and safe for all living creatures than fans and solar, when you figure in the cost or producing them servicing them, and getting rid of them when they die.I've been saying for a long time that windmills in operation can create low frequency noise that will disrupt many species, most notably whales. Never mind the install noises.
Windmills are better suited to land masses where the sound will drive gophers and moles away.
"According to the UN's Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), evidence does suggest that some types of extreme weather have become more extreme, particularly those relating to temperature trends. • However, many types of extreme weather show no signs of increasing and in some cases are decreasing.
"Drought has shown no clear increasing trend, nor has flooding. Hurricane intensity and number show no increasing trend. Globally, wildfires have shown no clear trend in increasing number or intensity, while in Canada, wildfires have actually been decreasing in number and areas consumed from the 1950s to the present.
"While media and political activists assert that the evidence for increasing harms from increasing extreme weather is iron-clad, it is anything but. In fact, it is quite limited, and of low reliability. Claims about extreme weather should not be used as the basis for committing to long-term regulatory regimes that will hurt current Canadian standards of living, and leave future generations worse off."
There is no real evidence that tornados are happening more often. A lot more are being recorded now than in 1950, but a closer look at the data shows the increase is only in the weakest category, EF0. There's been no increase in stronger twisters, and maybe even a slight decrease in EF4s and EF5s.
That suggests we're just spotting more of the weak and short-lived tornadoes than we did back when the country was emptier (the United States population in 1950 was less than half what it is now), we didn't have Doppler radar, and Oklahoma highways weren't jammed with storm-chasers.
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Human-induced climate change and destruction of nature is a global health emergency. By 2030, an estimated 2 billion people will reside in areas considered to be not well suited for sustaining human life.1 Extreme weather events, water and food insecurity, and the risk of infectious diseases are increasing. Immediate action to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions in all sectors of society is paramount to support a livable future.
Health care is a substantial contributor to the current environmental crisis. In 2021, the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference health program urged the health care community to reduce emissions by building low-carbon, sustainable health care systems. But knowledge about the carbon footprints of existing health care interventions and how best to assess the environmental effects of new tests, treatments, and services in relation to their clinical benefits has been limited. As a result, it’s been difficult to make evidence-based decisions focused on using clinically effective and climate-friendly interventions.
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