Climate Crisis, Biosphere & Societal Collapse
A place to share news, experiences and discussion about the continuing climate crisis, societal collapse, and biosphere collapse. Please be respectful of each other and remember the human.
Long live the Lützerath Mud Wizard.
Useful Links:
Earth - A Global Map of Wind, Weather and Ocean Conditions - Use the menu at bottom left to toggle different views. For example, you can see where wildfires/smoke are by selecting "Chem - COsc" to see carbon monoxide (CO) surface concentration.
Climate Reanalyzer (University of Maine) - A source for daily updated average global air temps, sea surface temps, sea ice, weather and more.
National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center (US) - Information about ENSO and weather predictions.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) Global Temperature Rankings Outlook (US) - Tool that is updated each month, concurrent with the release of the monthly global climate report.
Canadian Wildland Fire Information System - Government of Canada
Surging Seas Risk Zone Map - For discovering which areas could be underwater soon.
Check out our sister sub for collapse-related memes and silly stuff, Faster Than Expected!
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Maybe we could start by abolishing the institute of leeches called "insurance industry"? 🤔
That would accomplish nothing, it would in fact be counter productive and lead to more chaos, faster.
It's them who are now finally forcing actual reality on the ground to be reflected through increased costs, after decades of everyone else failing to build and adapt infrastructure to prevent the current crisis.
You can't have any kind of an economic system without some kind of an incentive structure, and right now, they're the only part of the current system that is even kind of functioning correctly, in line with reality.
They're where the buck stops.
They're actually assigning cost to climate change, instead of just doing carbon credit type bullshit, as most world governments have done, which basically amounts to giving away taxpayer money to whoever can figure out how to game that system most effectively.
Remove that, and well, everything falls apart rather quickly.
You are aware that insurers and insurance very often exists because it is legally mandated for all sorts of endeavors to have some kind of insurance, right?
World trade would basically cease, as every aircraft and ship and truck and train that moves stuff ... would stop doing that.
And then everyone but the hyper wealthy starve to death.
Please actually read the article.
What can actually be done, that is productive and useful?
The article ends with:
That's the top down approach, basically.
Another approach is bottom up:
Become as self-sufficient as you can, for as many things as you can.
Have a back-up water supply, get a small home solar power bank, do what climate related shoring up of your home that you can do, figure out how to reduce your overall power and water usage...
Unironically learn how to cook from closer to raw materials, maintain a pantry of shelf stable stuff in case food prices spike or their logistics that get them to the grocery store fails, figure out how to move yourself around town in a more rugged way that's less reliant on complex supply chains...
Learn how to repair and maintain what you have, instead of replacing everything with built-to-break bs.
If you get a whole mass of people doing that... strain on the overall system lessens somewhat, capacity to recover from a local or regional disaster, resiliance, improves somewhat.
At a kind of midpoint level... reorient economies from being global, to being regional.
You still have supply lines and logistics, you still have trade, but its a bit less of an overall selection, with significantly less distant logistical hops.
Reform land use policies to incentivize local agriculture or industry to be able to pop up to fill the gaps from the pivot away from global supply lines: source everything that you can as locally as you can, and when you can't find a local source, actually invest in building one.
Shorter supply lines = less fuel burned = less CO2 = less climate change.