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Climate Red - News and Views on Climate Change Issues.

Climate Red - December 2007

Big issues of 2008

December 31st 2007 03:25
Happy New Year Orblers.

Hope you all have a good one and don't break your New Years Resolutions before the first day is dawned

Here is a list of what Commsec sees as the biggest Economic and Social Issues for 2008, yet again Climate Change is at the top of the list.

2007 was an awesome year for Australians and their contirbution to Climate change solutions as well as general awareness. We should all be happy that we ar eon the page to continue this increasing awareness in 2008.

The story is below.


Have a good one, don't drink too much bubbly

cheers

Louie

Craig James

Economic outlook 2008: climate change will dominate


Climate change is expected to be the big issue for 2008, dominating public consciousness, affecting company strategies and influencing other issues such as development of alternative energy sources.

At CommSec we also believe that the apparent trade-off between inflation and unemployment will come under increased scrutiny in 2008. Unemployment rates in a range of industrialised countries are at 33-year lows and skilled labour shortages are increasingly appearing.

The big issues will change somewhat between 2007 and 2008, as summarised in the table below CLICK HERE FOR TABLE.





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From the horses mouth.

December 24th 2007 06:24
I know i am preaching to the converted but it doesn't hurt to remind ourselves during this time of excess that we really do need to continue slowing down the old consumption malfunction.........Here is a scary piece from the New York Times. An Editor asked four reporters to talk about Climate Change effects in their own backyards.

Very compelling and quite disturbing. Of course everytihng does go in cycles, weather being no exception but still...............

I wanted to publish this more to remind everyone to follow Lilla's tips on consuming less this Christmas more than anything.

Merry Christmas Orblers.
Louie

These FOUR stories are worth your time
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I am not sure if this article is meant to be a joke or if it's the next catch phrase in quatinfying and identifying the effcts of Climate change.

solastalgia is a word coined by Philospher Glenn Albrecht, heis using it to describe what he describes as a new phenomina, induced by the effects of global warming; a sadness, almost a home sickness that Australians feel because of the changes occurring in their surroundings, that are making their homes different in terms of landscape etc.

Albrecht believes that this is a new type of sadness. People are feeling displaced. They're suffering symptoms eerily similar to those of indigenous populations that are forcibly removed from their traditional homelands. But nobody is being relocated; they haven't moved anywhere. It's just that the familiar markers of their area, the physical and sensory signals that define home, are vanishing. Their environment is moving away from them, and they miss it terribly.

re

The article is below, it is actually quite a fascinating read, the cynic in me says its just a guy trying to cash in on Climate change in his way but I am happy to give him the benefit f the doubt. (Apolgies for no link I had some techy type troubles)


live Thompson on How the Next Victim of Climate Change Will Be Our Minds
By Clive Thompson clive@clivethompson.net 12.20.07 | 6:00 PM


Illustration: Brandon Kavulla Start
Previous: Jargon Watch: GPS Shield, QUID, Prehab
Australia is suffering through its worst dry spell in a millennium. The outback has turned into a dust bowl, crops are dying off at fantastic rates, cities are rationing water, coral reefs are dying, and the agricultural base is evaporating.

But what really intrigues Glenn Albrecht — a philosopher by training — is how his fellow Australians are reacting.

They're getting sad.

In interviews Albrecht conducted over the past few years, scores of Australians described their deep, wrenching sense of loss as they watch the landscape around them change. Familiar plants don't grow any more. Gardens won't take. Birds are gone. "They no longer feel like they know the place they've lived for decades," he says.

Albrecht believes that this is a new type of sadness. People are feeling displaced. They're suffering symptoms eerily similar to those of indigenous populations that are forcibly removed from their traditional homelands. But nobody is being relocated; they haven't moved anywhere. It's just that the familiar markers of their area, the physical and sensory signals that define home, are vanishing. Their environment is moving away from them, and they miss it terribly.

Albrecht has given this syndrome an evocative name: solastalgia. It's a mashup of the roots solacium (comfort) and algia (pain), which together aptly conjure the word nostalgia. In essence, it's pining for a lost environment. "Solastalgia," as he wrote in a scientific paper describing his theory, "is a form of homesickness one gets when one is still at home.'"

It's also a fascinating new way to think about the impact of global warming. Everyone's worrying about resource management and the spooky, unpredictable changes in the ecosystem. We fret over which areas will get flooded as sea levels rise. We estimate the odds of wars over clean water, and we tally up the species — polar bears, whales, wading birds — that'll go extinct.

But we should also be concerned about the huge toll climate change will inflict on our mental health. In the modern, industrialized West, many of us have forgotten how deeply we rely on the stability of nature for our psychic well-being. In a world of cheap airfares, laptops, and the Internet, we proudly regard mobility as a sign of how advanced we are. Hey, we're nomadic hipster capitalists! We love change. Only losers get attached to their hometowns.

This is a neat mythos, but in truth it's a pretty natural human urge to identify with a place and build one's sense of self around its comforts and permanence. I live in Manhattan, where the globe-hopping denizens tend to go berserk if their favorite coffee shop closes down. How will they react in 20 or 30 years if the native trees can't handle the 5-degree spike in average temperature? Or if weird new bugs infest the city in summer, fall shrinks to a single month, and snow becomes a distant memory? "We like to think that we're cool, 21st-century people, but the basic sense of a connection to the land is still big," Albrecht says. "We haven't evolved that much.

"What's more, Albrecht has noticed that the more quickly environmental change occurs, the more intense the solastalgia. The mental-health effects can be powerful. In the Australian outback, industrial activity — notably open-pit coal mining — has turned verdant areas into moonscapes seemingly overnight, and the suicide rate in the region has skyrocketed. Or witness New Orleans, where a Harvard survey found that survivors of Hurricane Katrina reported suffering a "serious mental illness" at roughly double the rate of the city's residents three years earlier. Fully 6 percent have thought about suicide. Trauma and personal loss obviously play a role in this, but the decimation of the city's physical environment surely does as well.

Ironically, we may simply be rediscovering a syndrome that we thought was dead and buried. Back in the 1940s, the military considered homesickness to be a serious and potentially fatal illness, because drafted soldiers who got shipped overseas would often become savagely depressed. These days, Americans are rarely dislocated against their will, and the army is all-volunteer. Few of us have the experience of being unmoored in the world.

But that may be changing rapidly. In a world that's quickly heating up and drying up, you can't go home again — even if you never leave.
QUOTE]
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damned if you do, dammed if you don't

December 18th 2007 23:27
Here is an excellent synopsis (please read below) of the Bali outcome, Rudd and Wong's performance. In my view Wong was the stand-out performer

There are some interesting points in the article if you want to understand the future of the negotiations, and just where we as a world should be aiming to end up


[ Click here to read more ]
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Penny Wong did us proud over the weekend, playing an integral part in the Bali Negotiations, the outcome of which is a roadmap to lead into the final conference and new agreement scheduled to be signed at the end of 2009.
Even the US capitulated a little thanks to Wong's persistence.
Below is an extract of an email I received from a conference goer, he touts the agreement as a breqkthrough


[ Click here to read more ]
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so so or worthy of praise...you decide

December 13th 2007 02:30
Here is a transcript of Rudd's address to the UN conference in Bali, a friend of mine who was there said it was a "barn burner"...... there's a lot of big talk in there which i suspect my writing teacher would say err's to the side of melodrama,.... you decide for yourself, read below. Maybe it would have been better live?

A few patches raised my hackles a little for example this bit had me thinking I was in an episode of the West Wing
The community of nations must reach agreement. There is no Plan B. There is no other planet that we can escape to. We only have this one. And none of us can do it alone. So let’s get it right.

[ Click here to read more ]
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is this some knd of joke.....

December 9th 2007 02:11
The delegations going to Bali, are sorting their own Carbon offsets because the organisers couldn't agree on how to offset the conference...Is this some kind of joke people, you are supposed to be running a conference to halt global warming REQUIRING pretty much global agreement on how to reduce emissions; and you couldn't agree on a simple thing like offsetting the conference???

Ill have to say as far as lame goes there could be a place in history for this. Here's hoping the Delegates do a little better than the organisers. Could it really be that hard to work out the number of people attending, the emissions per head, then add it to the cost per attendee, surely not, i mean these are the people that invented offsets


[ Click here to read more ]
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Or shock horror will they have to stay in something lower than a Five-star hotel....

I received a bazaar email from a credible environmental mailing list a week or two ago.....I think it goes to at least a few thousand people, it was titled


[ Click here to read more ]
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20,000 cars....is it really so bad?

December 6th 2007 22:38
ark-x carbon fund
There is a ot of negative press floating around about the number of people going to Bali this week and how many emissions are being created in order to negotiate the new version of Kyoto.
Some of the figures range from 10 -15,000 delegates from various countries and vested interests - lobbyists, entrepreneurs, junkett seekers etc etc . Apparently they will emit the equivalent of what about 20,000 cars do in a year - not a small amount of Emissions for their sins!!

[ Click here to read more ]
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