From Prof. Eliot Jacobson:

Wow! Wow! Wow!

North Atlantic sea surface temperature anomalies are going vertical again. And yes, I needed to extend the y-axis.

Yesterday’s temperature of 24.49°C (76.08°F) was 4.2σ above the 1991-2020 mean. The previous high for July 17 was 23.71°C (74.68°F) in 2020.

https://twitter.com/EliotJacobson/status/1681321023306874880

  • @majcurve
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    1301 year ago

    We are so fucked

    • @AllonzeeLV
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      1 year ago

      Yep, but for a shining moment in time, humanity created a lot of value for shareholders!

        • @AllonzeeLV
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          1 year ago

          Far worse than that. Significant shareholders, not someone’s paltry 401k, but people who hoard millions upon millions+ are the only people the owner class considers to be people at all.

          We aren’t people to our owners, we are livestock meant to be exploited for all the value we can produce, and then tossed away like the useless garbage we are to them despite being the ones that generate their wealth. Remembering or honoring that fact would interfere with their self-delusions of being “self-made.” We aren’t human to them, which makes it easier to do what they do to us.

          Thats why they go to such extraordinary lengths to segregate themselves from us. They send their children to private schools for rich kids who teach them they will be the future leaders of the world and the most altruistic thing they can do is increase their own net worth, while never exposing them to social interaction with peasant children, to ensure they don’t develop empathy with us or humanize us peasants, which would have to happen at a young age while worldviews are forming. A handful overcome this, but almost all of them embrace it. Most of the wealth class actively creates walls to avoid interacting with the cattle.

          It doesn’t feel nearly as cruel if you perceive those being paid almost nothing in sweatshops to manufacture the crap you make for private profit to be mindless beasts.

          https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/18/the-wealthiest-10percent-of-americans-own-a-record-89percent-of-all-us-stocks.html

    • @chuckleslord
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      631 year ago

      Capitalism is working! Line go up!

      • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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        11 year ago

        This isn’t the free market we imagined… it’s unregulated capitalism, to the point that smaller eco-friendly companies can’t compete. At this point the market isn’t free anymore.

        • Sabata11792
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          261 year ago

          It works as intended for the guys who own the politicians so its not getting fixed.

        • @TokenBoomer
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          81 year ago

          It never was. Remember, capitalism has to be regulated to work. Adam Smith even said so. Looking at you ancaps and libertarians.

          According to Adam Smith, markets and trade are, in principle, good things—provided there is competition and a regulatory framework that prevents ruthless selfishness, greed and rapacity from leading to socially harmful outcomes.

        • @maggoats
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          51 year ago

          Indeed. People almost invariably conflate capitalism with free markets, whereas those relatively independent properties.

        • @Cruxifux
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          31 year ago

          George Washington was one of the richest men in the world. What do you think he was imagining exactly?

          • Bipta
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            81 year ago

            What sort of stupid comment is this blaming George fucking Washington?

            • @Cruxifux
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              -31 year ago

              He was the first US president and paved the way for the writing of the constitution, which is the basis of how the wests entire capitalist structure (and due to US controlled international hegemony, the world). Does that clear it up a bit for you where my point is? I can explain it further if you want. It’s not the only factor, but when people say “this isn’t the free market capitalism that was intended!” I tend to roll my eyes.

              • @[email protected]
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                1 year ago

                I tend to roll my eyes when people think any one man is responsible for setting up the entire Western capitalist structure. I don’t actually think that’s what you’re saying, but it’s important to note that George Washington may have been the final decider, but had otherwise little to do with forming and reforming the policies that make up the capitalist structure as we know it today. It’s extremely lazy to try and blame it on any one person.

                • @Cruxifux
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                  11 year ago

                  Yeah that’s not what I was trying to do dude lol

                • queermunist she/her
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                  -31 year ago

                  The intent is to blame the Founders, and they all were rich slave owners and businessmen. The entire American revolution was reactionary. This is what they wanted.

          • zout
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            21 year ago

            He was also worth the equivalent of half a billion dollars.

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          We need to stop this rhetoric. This is what “free market capitalism” always devolves into. It is not Marxists who are utopians, it is capitalists who believe that this is not the natural end result of the accumulation of power and rise of corruption that is inherent to capitalism.

        • @ghostBones
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          11 year ago

          Al Gore needed a ladder because of those pesky vertical lines.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Honestly how long do we have until we experience massive fishing and crop failures everywhere?

    • @melisdrawing
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      461 year ago

      Enjoy your days before. The working turn of phrase has consistently been, “Faster than expected.”

    • 1chemistdown
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      371 year ago

      We already are experiencing that. Crab fishing season was cancelled in 2022 due to a sudden “where are our missing billions of crab?” Other fishing areas are likewise being affected.

      Massive crop failures in China, Russia, Middle East, Africa, south and Central America have been going on for several years. Potable water is disappearing in many regions, forcing massive water migration.

    • Ertebolle
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      121 year ago

      On a planetary scale, I don’t think we’re going to have trouble feeding ourselves, it’s just that a) meat is going to become thoroughly unaffordable and b) an awful lot of crop production is going to shift towards the poles, creating many a geopolitical clusterfuck along the way.

      Disaster movies are too obvious, and too tidy; it’s going to be a century of the average human’s life getting just a bit more hellish every year. Acutely hellish for some, barely hellish at all for others, but basically, we’re going to slowly roll back most of the improvements in human welfare over the past few centuries until we’ve got starving serfs all over the place and plagues and famines and natural disasters absolutely flattening entire countries for years at a time.

    • 😈MedicPig🐷BabySaver😈
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      91 year ago

      Very fucking soon.

      You ever watch disaster movies? They’re only 2-2.5hrs average.

      Well, imagine this is a movie. The 100+ years of data we ignored was that “secret file” that was just discovered. The new high temps are the geeky science guy yelling “oh shit!”

      Remember what happens right after that? Very, very quick collapse. Food disaster, heat disaster, weather events and oxygen decrease in our atmosphere.

      We’ll either starve, boil, suffocate or kill each other trying to survive.

      I think it’s within a couple years. Not decades that is typically reported.

      • @TokenBoomer
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        111 year ago

        Couple years. We won’t get off that easy. This is sloooowww slide 🛝 with road rash and rug burns. It’ll be bad, then get better, then get worse, then get better, and then…

        • 😈MedicPig🐷BabySaver😈
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          41 year ago

          I don’t think so. We already had that. People just won’t acknowledge or recognize it. The cliché “end is nigh” coming right up.

          • @TokenBoomer
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            51 year ago

            We’d be better off if it toppled in a week. Then we’d have purpose in rebuilding. I hope you’re right.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        We’re all going to kill each other due to economic collapse and scarcity of resources long before anyone is being boiled alive.

    • @Gimly
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      191 year ago

      Well, it kind of is nice if you like to swim in the ocean and don’t like the cold? /s (in case)

  • Chainweasel
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    1 year ago

    It takes about ~30 years to see the effects of emissions on the climate. That means the climate crisis we’re experiencing right now is only the emissions up to ~1993. Looking at CO2 emissions alone, in 1993 the global total was 22.8 billion tonnes. The latest Data available is from 2021, which shows the global CO2 emissions at 37.1 billion tonnes. That’s in increase of 14.3 billion tonnes of annual CO2 emissions in the amount of time it takes us to feel the effects, that’s a 61% increase in Annual emissions, Not Total emissions. If we stopped all CO2 emissions today, it would continue to get considerably worse for at least the next quarter-century. We are truly Fucked on the bleeding edge of that climate “tipping point” and major changes are about to start happening very rapidly.

    source for CO2 emissions numbers: https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions

    • @Cybermass
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      131 year ago

      Where did you learn that CO2 emissions take 30 years to have an effect on our atmosphere?? I’ve never heard that.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I think it’s a misunderstanding, not a myth.

        CO2 influences the greenhouse effect - keeping more solar energy on Earth.

        Solar energy gets converted into heat, heat gets absorbed. Some of it gets absorbed by oceans. Some of CO2 also gets absorbed by oceans - their pH decreases. The greenhouse effect doesn’t require great time, but oceanic warming and acidification does require time. Interaction happens on the surface, but the volume is great.

        Thus, delays in response are inevitable. Response may also depend on circulation - an ocean current slowing or speeding up.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Imagine a bull in a china shop destroying everything, now there is two options :

        • 1- you take the bull out of the shop
        • 2- you decide that it would be to inconvenient to take the bull out but you are sure that in a few decades we will invent a technology that can repair the China faster than the bull is destroying it.

        Carbon capture is the option 2, we continue to break the carbon molecules for energy pretending that we can recapture later. It’s not gonna happen, we need to stop emitting NOW and maybe we can think about carbon capture.

      • xapr [he/him]
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        01 year ago

        Apparently the scale that’s required makes it completely impractical, especially given the timelines that are also required.

    • @marcos
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      01 year ago

      No, the GP is talking about proportional effects. A tipping point is some completely different thing.

        • @marcos
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          1 year ago

          Right, the graph could be due to a tipping point. If that’s the case, none of what the parent post said applies, since the post is all about proportional effects.

          EDIT: Hum, I think I’ve misread the OP. I though this was a reply to the post about delayed effects.

    • ptpf
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      41 year ago

      Oceans only go up

  • @rf_
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    41 year ago

    Does this mean we’re gonna have very strong storms?

    • Skyler
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      291 year ago

      There were multiple El Nino events during the period of 1982-2022 and yet none of them come close to 2023.

    • @guriiniiOP
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      151 year ago

      This is also related to the change in fuels for ships. They banned something that emits aerosols which has reduced the masking effect. And this started prior to El Niño starting. It’s likely a combination of the above and some other tipping point shenanigans

        • @[email protected]
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          101 year ago

          Heavy particulate smog cools the planet. Horrible for people, but has masked how bad CO2 has increased global heating.

          As many places have cleaned up diesel fuel emissions, the heating has increased.

          The US East coast pollution of the 1970’s was a major contribution to the drought in Ethiopia in the 80’s. Dense smog blocks ocean evaporation. Chinese heavy smog has been causing a lot of the drought conditions in the western US due to the same factors.

          I find it amazing how each Continent causes changes in other Continents.

            • @anon232
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              31 year ago

              Isnt that what happened in the Matrix and why the world was left in desolation due to the crazy weather that that caused?

            • @marcos
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              31 year ago

              There are people that seriously propose that.

            • @guriiniiOP
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              21 year ago

              Essentially. We’d have to continue creating a masking effect, while stopping and reducing CO².

              I think if humanity joined forces, a united effort, we could fix it, but I think we won’t, because of the greedy few.