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Beiträge, die mit ClimateCatastrophy getaggt sind


#Hollywood #ParisHilton #JenniferLopez
#wildfires #palisadesfire #eatonfire
#climatecatastrophy

side fact

Paris Hilton is amongst the celebrity 'super-emitters' on Place 2

In 2017 she flew 171,346 miles by various private jets.
Emitting more than 1,260 tons of CO2 in the process.

In 2018 she tweeted to her 17.1million followers: 'This is earth. It's hot. Don't pollute.'

Place 3 of the list of colossal carbon footprints goes to Jennifer Lopez

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/these-celebrities-cause-10000-times-more-carbon-emissions-flying-average-person


I'd like to make a correction. Climate CHANGE denialism, and climate CHANGE minimalisation.
You see, removing that word has already removed the impact. You can say #ClimateCrisis and #ClimateCatastrophy, and not lose the urgency. But, inferring that people are denying climate? That's a nonsense.
Minimising weather has been a thing for decades. Just a 'bit of wind' blowing the roof off a house down the road. Yeah, it rained a bit more than usual, says the guy sitting on his roof.
Climate Change is when these things happen every year...or twice a year. Denying that this is happening - or could happen - is done by dangerous fools. Denying that it is anthropomorphic? Same. Pumping Co2 into the atmosphere at a greater rate? Have they found another planet?


The Climate Council is warning that there is a growing risk that different parts of Australia may face more than one disaster at the same time or in quick succession, with cascading severe weather events a real possibilitythis summer.

“We call it climate whiplash,” a former commissioner of Fire and Rescue NSW, Greg Mullins, said during a media briefing today.

“We go from heatwaves and fires to floods and storms.”

#auspol #ClimateCatastrophy
Above-average temperatures are predicted forthis summer in many parts of Australia, based on the Bureau of Meteorology’s long-range forecasts.

This summer will also likely be wetter than normal – especially in December – with a greater chance of unusually high rainfall in parts of Australia’s east and northwest.