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Trump is pushing allies to buy US gas. It’s bad economics – and a catastrophe for the climate


The current US administration wants to protect fossil fuel profits, slow the clean energy transition and curb China’s influence — whatever the cost to allies or the climate.
in reply to schizoidman

I fear that EU will cave to the Orange as it usually does after a week or so. Read the article - it already did, no surprises there.
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in reply to Rimu

it actually make sense, and has been known for a while, why they are invading ukraine, less reliance on russian oils and minerals have gotten vlad very concerned and flailing about his hold on the world. thats why he invaded ukraine he needs thier resources and upped his propaganda machine, and pressured his russian agents in the west. better of gettin it from places like china instead of volatile russia.
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in reply to silence7

According to Snam, the leak was caused by “the imperfect internal seal of a worn component,” which it would replace “in the coming months.”


Such selfless stewardship!





in reply to signaleleven

Looking forward to seeing it, I'd love to get solar and to ditch gas for a heat pump, but funds are not there 😔

one day... one day...

in reply to OwlPaste

A heat pump is also in my future, but the funds need to recover from this round of energy efficiency interventions first.

But even before then, having resistive heating might not be the best (or the cheapest) but I love to be able to measure all my house energy needs in kWh without conversions (sure if you have gas you can count cubic meters, but it's a lot of approximations).



Opinion | Move nitrogen fertilizer higher on your worry list | Two huge threats to our environment come from this exact same source.


The Star Tribune uses utm_source to mark gift links. Lemmy and other fediverse software usually strips that out. Click tinyurl.com/4wb3usjv to get the gift link version
in reply to silence7

I'm pretty sure all that corn then feeds cows and chickens though. We still need to stop eating animals
in reply to LSNLDN

Gas tanks too. US corn is roughly half animal feed, half alcohol blended into gasoline, and a tiny residue food for people

in reply to blibla

They are easy to find. If they are trying to stop Antifa ... they are fascists.
in reply to blibla

There is no paradox in the social contract.

Tolerance is mutual. Respect is mutual. Kindness is mutual.







How the fossil fuel lobby captured a landmark Australian Labor policy


The federal government’s Future Gas Strategy, which backs extending production through to 2050 and beyond, is based on contested EY research commissioned by Australian Energy Producers.


Should we treat environmental crime more like murder?


One day it struck me that the world would be a very different place if environmental crimes were treated in the same way as murders. So, why aren’t they? And should they be?

At the moment such crimes can, mistakenly, feel distant and abstract. If someone came into your flat and set fire to your furniture, stole your valuables, killed your pet, added poison to your water … what would you do? You’d be terrified. You’d go to the police. You might want revenge. You’d certainly want justice. It would be entirely obvious to you that a crime had been committed.

in reply to grimpy

I don't know what you mean by "like murder".

Do I think we need more capital punishment? Absolutely not. We should never kill person that's already restrained from doing harm, even if their intent is clear.

Do I think there could be more meaningful liability? Yes. I think restorative justice means not just MUCH heavier fines (large percent of gross income for the entire period they are in violation) that are earmarked for environment restoration / pollution control efforts, but also time spent doing the work, on-site to restore / clean / contain for everyone in the decision/authority chain, across organizations.

I also think anyone that has been convicted/punished from wrong environment decision/action more than once could be subject to monitoring, publication, and shaming. Whatever education is part of the restorative justice is not enough, and society has to engage in prevention as a defense.

They should be treated more as "crimes against persons" than "property crimes": probably.

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in reply to silence7

But but but green china? Solar panels? Are they just moving the pollution elsewhere and spit-shining a turd?
in reply to klammeraffe

No. They're both doing things which make a difference, and exporting the technology to cause others to develop in a costly and high-pollution way
in reply to klammeraffe

While this buildout was driven by Indonesian leaders, and Japan and South Korea have provided significant financing, too, no foreign nation has played a larger role than China.

“China is a good friend for all the presidents to fulfill their campaign promises,” said Muhammad Zulfikar Rakhmat, director of the China-Indonesia desk at the Center of Economic and Law Studies, a research and advocacy group in Indonesia. Where lenders from other countries have pledged money without delivering, Rakhmat said, Chinese enterprises provided financing quickly and with few requirements.

Today, Chinese companies are continuing to build new coal plants in Indonesia, despite a 2021 pledge by China’s president, Xi Jinping, that Beijing would end such financing.

In an ironic twist, many of the new Chinese-backed coal plants are powering operations that Indonesian leaders say will help transition the world to cleaner energy. These so-called “captive” coal plants are not connected to the grid but instead serve as dedicated power sources for new industrial parks refining nickel, used in electric vehicle batteries, or manufacturing solar panel components. The projects are backed largely by private Chinese companies rather than state-owned enterprises, and their status as captive power plants appears to allow them to flow through a loophole in Xi’s 2021 pledge.

Beyond these captive plants in Indonesia, China has largely stuck to that promise—only a few other Chinese-backed coal units were newly planned last year, in Kyrgyzstan, Zambia and Zimbabwe, according to the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, an independent research group based in Finland.\


It's a good article. You should read it instead of just assuming it confirms all your anti-china bias. Don't get me wrong, I think building new coal plants is bad even if it's for nickle that goes into an electric car. IMO the CPC should stop private capital from investing in those "captive" plants as well.




A “controversial” methane metric?







EV adoption surges in developing nations, challenging oil demand narrative


cross-posted from: piefed.social/post/1371452

There’s a comforting story that oil bulls like to tell themselves to stave off worries about the future: While the privileged few in Europe and California might have lost their minds over electric vehicles, billions of drivers in the Global South are readying themselves to provide the next wave of petroleum demand.

Those who believe this might want to have a look at the cars and two-wheelers that people are actually buying right now. Far from trailing the rich world in their enthusiasm for battery cars, developing nations are surging ahead.


[...]

Things are moving even faster in nations wholly dependent on imports. More than three-quarters of the value of vehicles brought into Nepal, Sri Lanka and Djibouti last year was purely electric. Import shares in Ethiopia and Laos were 40 per cent and 30 per cent respectively. Plug-in sales increased by 60 per cent in developing countries as a whole in 2024, according to the International Energy Agency.

https://www.business-standard.com/industry/news/ev-adoption-surges-in-developing-nations-challenging-oil-demand-narrative-125081100114_1.html

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Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney Stands by His Climate Agenda


Despite deep green credentials — including a five-year stint as United Nations special envoy for climate change — Carney has scrapped a number of environmental policies introduced by his predecessor, Justin Trudeau, and struck a notably friendlier tone on fossil fuel production. He’s fast-tracked approval for a liquefied natural gas export facility expansion in British Columbia, opened the door to the possibility of a new oil pipeline to the country’s west coast, and hasn’t ruled out abandoning plans for anemissions cap for oil and gas producers.

Pressed on his plans for the cap, Carney repeatedly responded that “a desired outcome” — in this case emissions reduction — “is not a policy.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-10-18/canadian-prime-minister-mark-carney-stands-by-his-climate-agenda?accessToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzb3VyY2UiOiJTdWJzY3JpYmVyR2lmdGVkQXJ0aWNsZSIsImlhdCI6MTc2MDc5NDc4NCwiZXhwIjoxNzYxMzk5NTg0LCJhcnRpY2xlSWQiOiJUNEJUQ0VHUFdDSjIwMCIsImJjb25uZWN0SWQiOiJDMkYxNDM5NTYzRjg0QTBFOEIxNzA5MzY0RjMyQ0JFOCJ9.s9DHv6y8Jv8ZsQOuU3EwmZY1IU6SNvt1y_OFSbaAj6U






The northern migration of the temperate forest isn’t proceeding as expected


Could the boreal forest be less fragile than we think? Contrary to the predictions of models that forecast its rapid decline in favour of temperate maple forests, the ecological history of the boreal forest is showing surprising resilience.





in reply to Track_Shovel

We have one that barely has any grass left. We are surrounded by meadows and there is so much just random plants growing. Don't tell me our lawn is bad since the obly difference between it and the surrounding meadows is that we mow ours.
in reply to WIZARD POPE💫

Pretty sure the mowing is the exact problem. Can't remember if it's solved by using an old school push-powered mower or something

Edit - after looking into it, seems like push mowers don't help because Americans eating meat will cause as much pollution pushing a mower as using gas? Not sure

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in reply to iloveDigit

Would you prefer I cut it with a scythe? I already do that with a particularly steep part of the grass
in reply to WIZARD POPE💫

I thought a push mower might help but some studies say it might be worse. I guess the recommendation is to plant something other than grass that naturally stays good to walk on, maybe? I'm still learning about this myself
in reply to iloveDigit

Half the grass behind the house is dead anyway and was replaced by moss naturally. The issue is the moss would dry out faster and die in the summer. The current situation is probably the best
in reply to WIZARD POPE💫

I don't think I trust the studies saying human power is worse tbh. Cultivating food uses CO2, cows eat plants before we eat them, the plants drink CO2 from the air. Lawnmower takes power out of the ground and injects pollution in the air. Scythe has to be better
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in reply to Track_Shovel

People on here always talk about how lawns need a bunch of fertilizer to work, but that never made sense to me because we've never done that around here. But then I learned that's because everyone just has clover growing along side their grass.


Anyway I think shaming people for their lawn is a bad idea. I think killing your lawn will only catch on if it's presented as a way to make your lawn cooler. You're not a bad person for having a lawn, but you could change it into something so much more interesting by including native flora.



Carbon Dioxide Levels Jumped by a Record Amount, U.N. Says


Surging emissions from wildfires may have been behind the increase, which was the largest since modern measurements began more than half a century ago.


Note that it's fossil fuel use that is responsible for the bulk of the added CO2; it's just the year-to-year variation that might be due to wildfires.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/16/climate/carbon-dioxide-emissions-record-jump.html?unlocked_article_code=1.t08.uxUE.qrARFgVyOWFI

in reply to silence7

Natural gas is helping power the use of artificial intelligence

In 2023, data centers consumed approximately 7.4 gigawatts (GW) of electricity globally, or enough to power more than six million homes.

Natural gas is one solution to powering these centers, and Chevron recently announced that it will work with Engine No. 1 and GE Verona to generate electricity for AI. The companies’ plans include building natural gas power plants directly connected to data centers.

During the Gastech conference in September 2024, Mike Wirth, Chevron chairman and CEO, highlighted the role that the Permian Basin could play in powering data centers.

“Natural gas will help power the rapid growth of artificial intelligence with its insatiable demand for reliable electricity,” Wirth said. “This means AI’s advance will depend not only on the design labs of Silicon Valley, but also on the gas fields of the Permian Basin.”



According to Goldman Sachs, incremental data center power demand will drive 3.3 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of new natural gas demand by 2030.


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in reply to silence7

Surging emissions from wildfires may have been behind the increase


No, no, no. That not possible. Me told forests -ABSORB- CO², not emit it. If tipping points reached and sink become source, how are Grog's carbon credits going to maintain value?

How Bill Gates private jet fuel itself, carbon neutral like, if planted forests now ash? Grog confused. sad noises





Harnessing technology and global collaboration to understand peatlands


Crowdsourcing photos is a neat way to gauge the health of those ecosystems. I've quoted some excerpts from the article below.

A link to the study: doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ae06…

Peatlands are among the world’s most important yet underappreciated ecosystems. They are a type of wetland that covers a small fraction of the Earth’s land, while containing the most carbon-rich soils in the world.

Healthy peatlands shape water cycles, support unique biodiversity and sustain communities. Yet for all their importance, we still lack a clear picture of how peatlands are changing through time.

When peatlands are drained, degraded or burned, the carbon they hold is released into the atmosphere. More than three million square kilometres of wetlands have been drained by humans since 1700, meaning we have lost a huge amount of carbon sequestration potential globally. This makes it all the more important for us to understand and conserve remaining peatlands.

Our study, called The PeatPic Project, used smartphone photography to collect data. We connected with peatland researchers around the world via social media and word of mouth and asked them to collect photographs of their peatlands during 2021 and 2022. We gathered more than 3,700 photographs from 27 peatlands in 10 countries.

We analyzed these photographs to look at the plant colour, telling us how green leaves are across the year, and providing rich information on the vegetation growing there. Changes in green leaf colour indicate when plants start their growing season.

They also indicate how green or healthy plants are, how much nutrient plants take up and when they turn brown in the autumn. Colour shifts can also signal changes in moisture or nutrient conditions, temperature stress or disturbance.

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in reply to Otter Raft

This technology could feed a world of 10 billion.


Yeah, but for how long? Climate change, soil erosion and aquifer depletion.