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#climateemergency

54 posts45 participants8 posts today
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@mikegalsworthy

Very interesting.

> he and another protester used a glass-break hammer and orange paint to damage 16 pump screens at an Esso petrol station

...

> Dr Hart has been both acquitted and convicted multiple times for nonviolent direct action linked to the climate crisis

I would be curious to know more about his previous convictions, and whether or not (and if so, how) they influenced sentencing by the judge, and the decision by the GMC to suspend him for 12 months.

I hope he took advice from his medical defence union or similar before this particular act.

I can think of many, many ways he could potentially act that would be wildly more sustainable (forgive my use of the word; I mean merely that they might avoid his being imprisoned), and fantastically more damaging to oil extraction, than his chosen course of action. I lament that no one provided him with more constructive discussion before he embarked on these particular acts.

"[ @greenpeace ] gave birth to the non-Indigenous part of the modern environmental movement in the early 1970s and captured the imagination of the world by engaging in spectacular and creative actions to save whales in the north Pacific and to stop nuclear testing. Greenpeace needs to be protected in this critical moment"

#ClimateEmergency
#Ecocide
#LandReform
#FreeSpeach
#ThereIsNoPlanetB

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

The Guardian · I was an independent observer in the Greenpeace trial. What I saw was shockingBy Steven Donziger

This is (part of) why I am, and intend to continue to be, a financial supporter of @greenpeace . I'm not claiming the organisation is perfect – none is – but we need groups with the courage, resources and skills to stand up to the onrushing #Corporate #Fascist wave.

#ClimateEmergency
#Ecocide
#LandReform
#FreeSpeach
#ThereIsNoPlanetB

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

The Guardian · I was an independent observer in the Greenpeace trial. What I saw was shockingBy Steven Donziger

#FYI #PaulBeckwith video lecture and literature review

"Atmospheric rivers (ARs) are narrow, elongated regions of intense atmospheric moisture transport that are responsible for a large proportion of midlatitude extreme precipitation. [...] ARs will intensify due to warmer air’s ability to hold more moisture."

youtube.com/watch?v=rJxIFYqxAU0

759 #ClimateEmergency #Alaska #Indigenous

"Alaska Natives want the US military to clean up its toxic waste"
by Anita Hofschneider for Grist [Mar 19, 2025] [Audio available]

grist.org/indigenous/alaska-na

Quotes:
"Now they're turning to the UN for help."

"In June 1942,../\..Army reserve made up of volunteers ../\..from Alaska’s Indigenous peoples — Aleut, Inupiak, Yupik, Tlingit, and many others — that the guard was nicknamed the “Eskimo Scouts.”

"“Our grandfathers and fathers volunteered for the Alaska territorial guard,” she [Viola Waghiyi, who is Yupik from Sivuqaq JdeB] said. “We were very patriotic.”

"But that trust was abused, Waghiyi said. The U.S. military eventually abandoned its Air Force and Army bases, leaving the land polluted with toxic chemicals such as fuel, mercury, and polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, that are known as “forever chemicals”

"Now, Waghiyi is the environmental health and justice program director at the Alaska Community Action on Toxics, an organization dedicated to limiting the effects of toxic substances on Alaska’s residents and environment."

"Their complaint calls for the United Nations to investigate how military waste on Sivuqaq continues to violate the rights of the people who live there../\..“By exposing the Yupik people of Sivuqaq to polluted drinking water sources, air, and soil, and by contaminating local native foods; by causing pervasive human exposure to hazardous chemicals through multiple routes"

"This submission from Alaska is part of a larger, global effort to raise awareness of military toxic waste by the United Nations../\..The information collected will be used in a report presented to the U.N. General Assembly in October."

"The two shuttered bases in Sivuqaq, Alaska, are now classified as “formerly used defense,” or FUD, sites, overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and more than $130 million has been spent to remove the contamination. John Budnik, a spokesman for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Alaska, said the cleanup is considered complete but that the agency is reviewing the site every five years “to ensure the selected remedies continue to be protective of human health and the environment.”

"A 2022 study found that so far, federal cleanup efforts have been inadequate. “High levels of persistent organic pollutants and toxic metals continue to leach from the Northeast Cape FUD site despite large-scale remediation that occurred in the early 2000s,” the authors concluded."

"Stephanie Buss, contaminated sites program manager at the agency, said her office has asked the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to do additional cleanup at Northeast Cape. “These active contaminated sites have not met closure requirements,” she said. The second former base, Gambell, was classified as completed but still lacks land use controls, she noted. "

"That same 2022 study found that 89 percent of the fish around the Northeast Cape base contained mercury exceeding the levels the EPA deemed appropriate for people who rely on subsistence fishing. “All fish sampled near the FUD site exceeded the EPA’s PCB guidelines for cancer risk for unrestricted human consumption,”

"“It’s not a matter of if we’ll get cancer, but when,” Waghiyi said. Her father died of cancer. Her mother had a stillborn child. Waghiyi herself is a cancer survivor and has had three miscarriages.
“We feel that they have turned their back on us,” Waghiyi said of the U.S. military. “We wanted our lands to be turned back in the same condition when they turned over.”

"The U.S. military has a long history of contaminating lands and waters through military training and battles sites, including on Indigenous lands. Citizens of the Navajo Nation in Arizona and Yakama Nation in Washington continue to raise concerns about the ongoing effects of military nuclear testing on their lands and health. In the Marshall Islands, fishing,... On Guam, chemicals... Last year, a federal report found that climate change threatens to unearth even more U.S. military nuclear waste in both the Marshall Islands and Greenland."

"In 2021, the Navy in Hawaiʻi poisoned 90,000 people when jet fuel leached from aging, massive underground storage tanks."

"The complaint filed last week by the Alaska Community Action on Toxics calls for the United Nations to write to U.S. federal and state agencies and call upon them to honor a 1951 agreement between the U.S. government and the Sivuqaq Yupik people that prohibited polluting the land."

"“The import of the agreement was clear: The military must not despoil the island... “This is a burden we didn’t create,” Waghiyi said."

Grist · Alaska Natives want the US military to clean up its toxic wasteBy Anita Hofschneider

Normally, two-thirds of sea level rise is due to melting ice from mountain glaciers and Greenland and Antarctic ice caps, and one-third from the thermal expansion of the oceans.

Last year, the hottest year on record, this was reversed, with warmer water accounting for two-thirds of the sea level rise of 0.59cm (0.23in) – considerably more than the 0.43cm scientists were expecting.

#climateChange #climateCatastrophe #climateEmergency #climateBreakdown #tippingPoint

theguardian.com/news/2025/mar/

The Guardian · Weatherwatch: warmer water drives higher-than-expected rise in sea levelBy Paul Brown

"#Canadians do appear to favour increased development to mitigate the economic effects of U.S. tariffs, our regulatory regimes need to be stronger, not weaker. Canadian history is replete with examples of tragedy in the wake of weak regulation or deregulation, from the Giant Mine in the Northwest Territories to the Lac Megantic rail disaster in Quebec." theglobeandmail.com/business/c

The Globe and Mail · As we dump carbon taxes and push pipelines, remember there’s no such thing as a free lunchBy Martin Olszynski