Arquivo da categoria: Uncategorized

Brasil oficializa ‘pedalada climática’ em nova meta de redução de gases (Folha de S.Paulo)

www1.folha.uol.com.br

Phillippe Watanabe

7 de abril de 2022


Uma atualização das metas de redução de gases estufa foi registrada pelo Brasil, nesta quinta-feira (7), na UNFCCC (sigla em inglês para Convenção-Quadro das Nações Unidas sobre Mudança do Clima), formalizando, dessa forma, uma “pedalada climática“.

As novas metas aparecem mais de cinco meses depois da COP26, a Conferência das Nações Unidas para Mudanças Climáticas, e, mesmo assim, ainda não formalizam todas promessas feitas durante o evento à comunidade internacional.

Entre os objetivos atualizados está a neutralidade de carbono até 2050, a redução, em 2025, de 37% dos gase estufa, em comparação com as emissões de 2005, e a diminuição, em 2030, de 50% dos gases, também em comparação com 2005.

As emissões brasileiras são resultado, principalmente, de desmatamento e atividade pecuária.

As promessas, feitas durante a COP, de zerar o desmatamento até 2030 e de redução na emissão de metano não constam no documento, ausência apontada por entidades como o Política por Inteiro e o Observatório do Clima.

Os cortes de emissões de gases para 2030 e a neutralidade de carbono em 2050 tinham sido anunciados pelo ministro do Meio Ambiente, Joaquim Leite, em 1º de novembro do ano passado.

As organizações também criticam a “pedalada climática” das metas apresentadas.

A pedalada ocorre pela mudança no dado das emissões de 2005, que foi atualizado nos mais recentes inventários nacionais de gases estufa, ou seja, ocorreu uma mudança na base de comparação.

A primeira NDC brasileira (sigla para contribuição nacional determinada e que pode ser, de modo mais simples, traduzida como meta climática) é de 2015, ano do Acordo de Paris. Nela, o Brasil se compromete a até 2030 reduzir em 43%, em relação a 2005, as emissões de gases estufa. Nesse cenário e com os dados disponíveis naquele momento, o país emitiria, em 2030, cerca de 1,208 gigatoneladas de gás carbônico equivalente (em linhas gerais, uma soma dos gases que causam o aquecimento global).

Com a evolução nas metodologias para medir os gases, os dados de 2005 sofreram correções e aumentaram. A meta brasileira, porém, não foi alinhada a essa correção e permaneceu em 43% de redução. Como os dados de base (2005) são menores, a redução de 43% passou a significar emissões maiores em 2030 (cerca de 1,620 gigatoneladas), em comparação ao prometido inicialmente. Surgiu, assim a pedalada climática.

Aumentando-se mais o percentual de corte de emissões, a situação poderia ser corrigida com a nota meta nacional submetida ao UNFCCC. Mas isso não aconteceu. Considerando o documento que foi submetido com 50% de redução de emissões, o Brasil em 2030 estará emitindo 1,281 gigatoneladas de CO2e (leia gás carbônico equivalente), segundo análises do Observatório do Clima e do Política por Inteiro.

O alerta sobre a manutenção da pedalada já tinha sido soado no momento em que Leite anunciou a nova meta, na COP26. No dia anterior à promessa, o Brasil havia, inclusive, submetido uma carta-adendo à UNFCCC em que oficializava somente a meta de neutralidade climática até 2050, sem citações aos objetivos desta década.

Organizações apontam que as novas metas nacionais não aumentam a ambição climática, algo que era esperado das nações que assinaram o Acordo de Paris.

“O teto de emissões estipulado para 2030 está uma Colômbia inteira (em termos de emissões anuais) acima daquele estipulado anteriormente pelo Governo do Brasil”, afirma uma análise produzida pelo Política por Inteiro. Já o teto de 2025 está uma Polônia inteira acima do estipulado anteriormente aponta o documento.

O Política por Inteiro ainda aponta que o país deve resolver em definitivo a questão de atualização de metas. “As sucessivas demonstrações de retrocesso afetam diretamente a credibilidade do país na esfera internacional”, diz a análise.

O Observatório do Clima aponta que o país está descumprindo o Acordo de Paris e que mente no documento enviado ao UNFCCC ao afirmar que está aumentando sua ambição.

“Continua sendo um retrocesso, num momento em que as Nações Unidas fazem um chamado para os países aumentarem suas ambições. O Brasil não responde ao chamado e ainda continua retrocedendo”, diz, em nota, Marcio Astrini, secretário-executivo do Observatório do Clima.

Lei de Cotas pode ser alterada com exclusão de critérios raciais para seleção de alunos (Carta Capital)

cartacapital.com.br

No texto sancionado por Dilma Rousseff, está prevista uma revisão do sistema após dez anos de implantação, o que ocorrerá em agosto próximo

Por Fabíola Mendonça e Rodrigo Martins | 11.03.2022 05h30


No início de 2021, uma família negra de Caçapava, no interior paulista, teve uma dupla conquista para celebrar. A técnica de enfermagem Sandra Baptista, de 53 anos, obteve uma bolsa de estudos integral para cursar Gestão Pública em uma universidade privada de Santos. Já a filha Lívia ­Gabrielle dos Santos da Silva, de 18 anos, foi aprovada no processo seletivo do curso de Engenharia Química da USP, no campus de Lorena, e tornou-se a primeira integrante do núcleo familiar a ter acesso a uma universidade pública. Até então, apenas outro filho teve a oportunidade de cursar uma faculdade, com financiamento pelo Fies.

Sandra precisou adiar por muitos anos o sonho do ensino superior. Chegou a iniciar alguns cursos no passado, mas precisou abandoná-los em decorrência de problemas financeiros. Agora, com os filhos crescidos, acredita ser possível conciliar o trabalho com a graduação a distância. Lívia, por sua vez, entrou na USP logo após o Ensino Médio. Não foi uma tarefa fácil, ainda mais em tempos de pandemia. “Começava às 7 e meia da manhã e seguia com os estudos até 9 da noite, sem descanso”, relembra. Um sacrifício necessário para dar conta das aulas remotas da escola, a elaboração do trabalho de conclusão de curso e o reforço do Emancipa, um cursinho popular, mantido por voluntários.

ANTES EM MINORIA, OS NEGROS HOJE SOMAM 51,2% DOS ALUNOS DAS UNIVERSIDADES FEDERAIS. AS VAGAS PARA BRANCOS TAMBÉM CRESCERAM

Beneficiária do sistema de cotas, ela recebe uma bolsa de 500 reais para custear a moradia e tem direito a refeições gratuitas no restaurante universitário. “Como divido o apartamento com duas amigas, consigo pagar a maior parte dos gastos. Ainda assim, preciso da ajuda dos meus pais para cobrir algumas despesas”, comenta. “Sem as cotas e sem esse auxílio financeiro do programa de permanência, eu jamais conseguiria fazer esse curso na USP. Os alunos da escola pública estão em muita desvantagem em relação aos de colégios particulares. E acho muito justo que a população negra tenha acesso facilitado às universidades, até para reparar os três séculos e meio de escravidão e toda a exclusão que sofremos desde então. Após a Abolição, por muitos anos nos impediram de estudar e até mesmo de trabalhar em algumas profissões, como cocheiro. Nada mais justo do que termos, ao menos, a possibilidade de modificar o nosso futuro.”

Assim como Lívia, centenas de milhares de brasileiros tiveram acesso à universidade pública facilitado pelas cotas raciais, implantadas oficialmente no Brasil a partir da Lei 12.711, de 2012. No texto sancionado por Dilma Rousseff, está prevista uma revisão do sistema de cotas após dez anos de implantação, o que ocorrerá em agosto próximo. O governo ainda não se pronunciou formalmente sobre o tema, mas o ministro da Educação, o pastor presbiteriano Milton Ribeiro, já se manifestou no passado contra a reserva de vagas por critérios étnico-raciais. Pior: no Congresso, representantes da base bolsonarista e da autointitulada “direita liberal” se articulam para derrubar o mecanismo, mantendo apenas os critérios sociais.

Em artigo publicado no Jornal da Ciência, um veículo da Sociedade Brasileira para o Progresso da Ciência, o advogado José Eduardo Cardoso, ex-ministro da Justiça, esclarece que a lei não tem prazo de validade. “No seu texto não existe nenhuma data estabelecendo o fim da sua vigência. Ao contrário, o que existe, no seu art. 7º, é a previsão de que se realize uma revisão dos seus termos, ‘no prazo de dez anos’, e não a afirmação da ‘perda­ da sua vigência’ após o período de dez anos”. Ou seja, a legislação não vai caducar, caso os parlamentares decidam analisar o tema com calma em outro momento, fora do afogadilho do período eleitoral.

“Sim, podemos ocupar espaços de poder“, diz Joana Guimarães, primeira reitora negra do País – Imagem: UFSB

Cleber Santos, presidente da Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores Negros e professor da Unifesp, reforça essa linha de raciocínio e não descarta judicializar a questão, caso seja retirada da lei a reserva de vagas nas universidades para pretos, pardos e indígenas (PPI). “A lei não tem uma expiração prevista para ocorrer em 2022. Fala de monitoramento e avaliação por parte dos órgãos públicos responsáveis, o que não ocorreu”, observa. “É preciso entender a revisão como um processo de aperfeiçoamento a partir desse monitoramento e avaliação, com dados concretos.”

A possibilidade da exclusão dos critérios raciais preocupa os defensores das cotas, sobretudo quando se considera o perfil do governo Bolsonaro, sempre refratário a políticas públicas inclusivas. “Há o enorme risco de aprovarem uma nova legislação que limite as cotas ou abram a possibilidade de o presidente Jair Bolsonaro vetar um trecho específico, que leve à exclusão de algum grupo beneficiado”, chama atenção Renato Janine Ribeiro, ex-ministro da Educação e atual presidente da SBPC. “É preciso destacar que todas as cotas são sociais, pois os beneficiários precisam ser, necessariamente, egressos de escolas públicas. Você pode ser negro, pode ser indígena, pode ter alguma deficiên­cia… Não terá direito à reserva de vagas a menos que tenha cursado os três anos do Ensino Médio na rede pública. Não vejo por que mudar esse sistema. Ele não prejudica ninguém. As cotas levam em conta a proporção de todos os grupos étnicos e pessoas com deficiência existentes em cada estado, nem mais nem menos.”

Uma das iniciativas para acabar com as cotas raciais foi apresentada pelo deputado Kim Kataguiri, do DEM. Em tramitação na Câmara, o Projeto de Lei 4125/21 estabelece que as vagas deveriam ser destinadas exclusivamente aos alunos de baixa renda. “Além de inconstitucionais, as políticas de discriminação positiva não fazem o menor sentido. Quem é excluído da educação é o pobre, que entra cedo no mercado de trabalho e depende dos serviços educacionais do Estado, que, em geral, são de péssima qualidade”, diz o parlamentar. “A pobreza não tem cor.”

Fontes: Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE): Pesquisas Anuais de Domicílios (1996, 2003 e 2014) e Censo 2010. V Pesquisa Nacional de Perfil Socioeconômico e Cultural dos(as) graduandos(as) das Ifes (2018).

O militante do MBL, que recentemente lamentou o fato de a Alemanha ter criminalizado o nazismo em um podcast, parece ignorar os indicadores sociais, sempre mais desfavoráveis à população negra, mesmo quando se comparam grupos com a mesma escolaridade ou faixa de renda. “Perder o componente racial é retroceder mais de 130 anos de história. As cotas ainda não respondem a toda necessidade da população brasileira, sobretudo a que vive discriminação histórica. É visível que avançou a presença dos estudantes negros nas universidades federais, mas é também visível a imensidão do lado de fora”, afirma Matilde Riberio, ex-ministra da Secretaria Especial de Igualdade Racial no governo Lula. “A manutenção do componente racial é uma responsabilidade do Estado e da sociedade, considerando que, em todos os dados estatísticos de todas as áreas das políticas públicas, você identificará que a população negra é preterida.”

A lei determina que todas as universidades e institutos federais de ensino devem reservar ao menos 50% das vagas dos cursos de graduação para alunos que tenham cursado integralmente o Ensino Médio em escolas públicas. Desse montante, metade das vagas será destinada a pessoas com renda de até um salário mínimo e meio per capita. A outra é distribuída entre pretos, pardos e indígenas e pessoas com deficiência, considerando a proporcionalidade das populações em cada estado, segundo o último Censo do ­IBGE. “O sistema de ensino é ruim para todos, brancos e não brancos, mas, quando a gente olha para o Ensino Médio, 71,7% dos jovens fora da escola são negros”, comenta José Nilton, professor de Educação das Relações Étnico-Raciais, disciplina obrigatória em todos os cursos da UFRPE.

A maior virtude da Lei de Cotas é o fato de ser uma política abrangente e multidimensional, com uma combinação de critérios que combate, simultaneamente, as desigualdades socioeconômicas e as raciais, ressalta Adriano Senkevics, doutor em Educação pela USP e pesquisador do Inep. Dessa forma, democratizou-se o acesso às universidades federais, inclusive nas carreiras mais prestigiadas, como medicina e engenharia. “Não se pode dizer que a legislação privilegia grupos que teriam condições financeiras de disputar vagas pelo sistema universal, pois todos os cotistas, sem exceção, precisam ser egressos de escola pública, dos quais metade deles também de renda baixa. E não bastaria manter apenas os critérios sociais, pois a desigualdade possui especificidades de cunho racial”, explica Senkevics.

O ministro-pastor Milton Ribeiro e o deputado Kim Kataguiri acreditam que a pobreza não tem cor. Quem sabe na Suécia, vai saber… – Imagem: Luis Fortes/MEC e Deputados do DEM

Em estudo publicado há três anos na Cadernos de Pesquisa, revista científica da Fundação Carlos Chagas, Senkevics e ­Ursula Mattioli Mello, pesquisadora do Institute for Economic Analysis, de ­Barcelona, revelaram o impacto da Lei de Cotas nas universidades. O porcentual de alunos egressos de escolas públicas e com renda de até um salário mínimo e meio, independentemente do perfil racial, aumentou de 48,12%, em 2012, para 54,8% em 2016. Dentro desse grupo, a maior expansão deu-se entre pretos, pardos e indígenas, cuja participação cresceu de 24,9% para 34% no mesmo período. “Ou seja, se a legislação não contemplasse os critérios raciais, haveria uma menor representatividade étnica no ensino superior.”

O impacto da Lei de Cotas foi ainda mais expressivo nas instituições de ensino que tardaram a adotar políticas afirmativas. A UFC, para citar um exemplo, não possuía qualquer sistema de reserva de vagas até então e dobrou o porcentua­l de ingressantes provenientes da escola pública em quatro anos – a participação desse grupo aumentou de 28,4%, em 2012, para 56,9%, em 2016. No caso da Ufes, que desde 2008 reservava de 40% a 50% das vagas para alunos da rede pública, o aumento foi tímido, de apenas 1,2%.

Autor do projeto pioneiro sobre cotas no Brasil, implantado na UnB em 2003, o antropólogo e professor José Jorge Carvalho acompanha esse debate há mais de 30 anos e diz ser incalculável a evolução da participação de pretos, pardos e indígenas nas universidades públicas. “Uma revolução foi feita. Eu lembro de dar aula há 20 anos em uma turma que eram todos brancos, às vezes tinha um único estudante negro. Agora, se você entrar na sala de aula, ela está integrada racialmente, com estudantes negros, brancos, indígenas, de baixa renda. É uma revolução social, racial e étnica gigantesca”, avalia. “A partir das cotas, os estudantes negros e indígenas começaram a questionar o currículo­ ensinado – eurocêntrico, centrado na cultura branca europeia. Queriam saber quando iriam estudar os escritores e poetas negros, a psicologia e a filosofia negras, a arte e o pensamento indígenas. A universidade cresceu intelectualmente.”

“SE REVISAR A LEI NESTE MOMENTO, HÁ O ENORME RISCO DE APROVAREM UMA NOVA LEGISLAÇÃO QUE LIMITE AS COTAS”, ALERTA JANINE RIBEIRO

Embora não considere o momento mais adequado para a revisão da Lei de Cotas, em razão da pressão de grupos reacionários pela supressão dos critérios raciais, Senkevics acredita que há, sim, aspectos que podem ser aperfeiçoados. Hoje, para definir o porcentual de vagas reservadas aos PPI em cada estado, são utilizados os dados do Censo Demográfico, realizado a cada dez anos. Além disso, a pandemia atrasou a realização do último levantamento, que deveria ter acontecido em 2020. O Censo está defasado e poderia perfeitamente ser substituído pela Pesquisa Nacional por Amostragem Domiciliar, atualizada constantemente pelo IBGE.

Outro ponto sensível é a ausência de regulamentação sobre o trabalho das comissões verificadoras das cotas, criadas para combater as fraudes na autodeclaração racial dos alunos. “Isso tem provocado uma crescente judicialização de casos, além de trazer prejuízos para todos os envolvidos: o estudante que é expulso nos anos finais de conclusão do curso, a universidade que gastou recursos para a formação desse aluno e o próprio cotista que perdeu aquela vaga”, observa ­Senkevics. “Com critérios mais claros, esse problema tende a ser minimizado.”

Fonte: IBGE, Pnad Contínua, 2018.

Autor de um projeto que propõe a prorrogação da Lei de Cotas por 50 anos e inclui na proposta políticas de assistência para a permanência dos estudantes, o ­deputado Valmir Assunção, do PT, defende a criação do Conselho Nacional das Ações Afirmativas do Ensino Superior, cuja finalidade seria monitorar a aplicação das regras, com a participação dos movimentos negro e estudantil das próprias universidades. Com os sucessivos cortes e congelamentos de recursos para o ensino superior desde 2015, as instituições de ensino enfrentam uma dificuldade cada vez maior de oferecer auxílio-moradia e refeições gratuitas aos alunos de baixa renda.

“Essa política material que garante assistência educacional é o que proporciona aos estudantes em vulnerabilidade a possibilidade de permanecerem nesses cursos onde a exigência é bem maior, como medicina. Mas, com os cortes, a gente não consegue atender a todos”, lamenta ­Cássia ­Virgínia Maciel, pró-reitora de Ações Afirmativas da UFBA, ressaltando que, em 2021, o corte na assistência estudantil da instituição foi de 7,2 milhões de reais. “Os valores repassados nunca deram para as universidades trabalharem com folga. Mas não havia essa política de negação do conhecimento como existe no governo atual”, completa Denise Góes, coordenadora da ­Comissão de Políticas Raciais da UFRJ, ressaltando que a universidade fluminense, a partir de 2019, precisou limitar a concessão de bolsas para alunos com renda ­per capita­ de até meio salário mínimo – antes, o benefício estendia-se a quem tinha até um salário mínimo e meio.

Importante observar que os brancos e asiáticos sofreram uma perda apenas relativa, em termos meramente proporcionais. “O número de vagas nas universidades federais passou de cerca de 100 mil, em 2001, para mais de 230 mil em 2011. Ou seja, o número de vagas para alunos não cotistas aumentou 15% nesse período, de 100 mil para 115 mil”, observa ­Janine Ribeiro. “A expansão da rede federal de ensino superior permitiu que ninguém fosse prejudicado com as cotas. Foi um jogo de ganha-ganha.”

“É VISÍVEL A PRESENÇA DOS NEGROS NAS UNIVERSIDADES, MAS É TAMBÉM VISÍVEL A IMENSIDÃO DO LADO DE FORA”, DIZ A EX-MINISTRA MATILDE RIBEIRO

A 5ª Pesquisa Nacional de Perfil Socioeconômico e Cultural dos(as) Graduandos(as) dos Ifes, realizada pela Andifes, corrobora a avaliação de Janine Ribeiro. Em termos porcentuais, a participação da população branca nas universidades federais caiu de 53,9%, em 2010, para 43,3%, em 2018. Não houve, porém, redução do número de alunos brancos. Ao contrário, o quantitativo aumentou de 353,8 mil para 520 mil no mesmo período. As cotas apenas asseguraram maior participação de grupos étnicos sub-representados. A população preta e parda, antes minoritária, passou a representar 51,2% do total de alunos.

O Grupo de Estudos Multidisciplinar da Ação Afirmativa, vinculado à Uerj, também tem dados que mostram a evolução das cotas nas universidades federais. Segundo o estudo, em 2012, havia pouco mais de 30 mil vagas para os cotistas e 110 mil para ampla concorrência. Sete anos depois, quase 138 mil pretos, pardos, indígenas e pessoas com deficiência puderam fazer um curso superior graças ao sistema. E isso não significou redução de vagas para brancos, pois havia mais de 125 mil ofertas para ampla concorrência, 15 mil a mais que em 2012. “A reserva de vagas foi e é a principal política de mobilidade social do País. É preciso não só manter, mas ampliar, e acabar com a visão de que não existe racismo no Brasil”, diz Penildo Silva Filho, pró-reitor de graduação da UFBA.

“A reparação mal começou“, observa Matilde – Imagem: Valter Campanato/ABR

Primeira mulher negra eleita reitora de uma universidade federal, a geóloga Joana Guimarães chama atenção para o caráter simbólico, histórico, cultural e socioeconômico das cotas. “O fato de eu estar como reitora de uma universidade tem um significado, passa a mensagem de que temos o direito de ocupar espaços de poder. Contribui para uma mudança de olhar, para que os alunos negros se sintam capazes”, destaca a docente, da UFSB. “O que faltou a eles foi oportunidade, pois são tão inteligentes quanto qualquer aluno branco. A única diferença são as condições, o ponto de partida.”

A representatividade também é percebida pela população indígena. Formado em jornalismo pela UFPE, Tarisson Nawa, de 25 anos, está concluindo mestrado e já foi aprovado para o doutorado da UFRJ, dentro da reserva para indígenas. Isso porque, mesmo sem a obrigatoriedade de cota na pós-graduação, muitos programas instituíram a ação afirmativa. “A gente não via perspectiva de entrar na universidade”, comenta. “As cotas são uma possibilidade de deixarmos de ser objeto de pesquisa para sermos autores da pesquisa. Não precisamos mais ser pesquisados por não indígenas, vamos construir as nossas próprias narrativas a partir das nossas vidas, numa cosmovisão dos povos indígenas.”

Sobre a adoção das cotas no mestrado e no doutorado, o coordenador dos Programas de Pós-Graduação em Direito da PUC Minas, Marciano Seabra Godoi, destaca a necessidade de pessoas negras e indígenas passarem a produzir conhecimento. “Quem pesquisa e cria teorias é o público da pós-graduação. É preciso colocar essa população para disputar narrativas. Se você coloca os cotistas só na graduação, nega a eles a produção do saber.” •

PUBLICADO NA EDIÇÃO Nº 1199 DE CARTACAPITAL, EM 16 DE MARÇO DE 2022.

Este texto aparece na edição impressa de CartaCapital sob o título “O revide da casa-grande”

Leia mais em https://www.cartacapital.com.br/politica/lei-de-cotas-pode-ser-alterada-com-exclusao-de-criterios-raciais-para-selecao-de-alunos/. O conteúdo de CartaCapital está protegido pela legislação brasileira sobre direito autoral. Essa defesa é necessária para manter o jornalismo corajoso e transparente de CartaCapital vivo e acessível a todos.

Editorial: Misinformation is blocking climate action, and the U.N. is finally calling it out (Los Angeles Times)

latimes.com

By The Times Editorial Board March 7, 2022 3 AM PT


A landmark U.N. climate report on the escalating effects of global warming broke new ground by finally highlighting the role of misinformation in obstructing climate action. It was the first time one of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s exhaustive assessments has called out the ways in which fossil fuel companies, climate deniers and conspiracy theorists have sown doubt and confusion about climate change and made it harder for policymakers to act.

The expert panel’s report released last week mostly focused on the increasing risk of catastrophe to nature and humanity from climate change. But it also laid out clear evidence of how misinformation about climate change and the “deliberate undermining of science” financed and organized by “vested economic and political interests,” along with deep partisanship and polarization, are delaying action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to their impacts.

The assessment describes an atmosphere in which public perception about climate change is continually undermined by fossil fuel interests’ peddling of false, misleading and contrarian information and its circulation through social media echo chambers; where there’s an entrenched partisan divide on climate science and solutions; and people reject factual information if it conflicts with their political ideology.

Sound familiar? It should, because the climate misinformation landscape is worse in the United States than practically any other country.

While the section on misinformation covers only a few of the more than 3,600 pages in the report approved by 195 countries, it’s notable that it’s in a chapter about North America and calls out the U.S. as a hotbed for conspiracy theories, partisanship and polarization. A 2018 study of 25 countries that was cited in the IPCC report found that the U.S. had a stronger link between climate skepticism and conspiratorial and conservative ideology than in any other nation tested. These forces aren’t just a threat to democracy, they are major roadblocks to climate action and seem to have sharpened with the Trump presidency and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Misinformation was included in the North America chapter for the first time this year “because there has been a lot of research conducted on the topic since the last major IPCC report was published in 2014,” said Sherilee Harper, one of the lead authors and an associate professor at the University of Alberta in Canada. “Evidence assessed in the report shows how strong party affiliation and partisan opinion polarization can contribute to delayed climate action, most notably in the U.S.A., but also in Canada.”

The IPCC’s language is measured but leaves no doubt that the fossil fuel industry and politicians who advance its agenda are responsible. It is shameful that fossil fuel interests have been so successful in misleading Americans about the greatest threat to our existence. The industry has engaged in a decades-long campaign to question climate science and delay action, enlisting conservative think tanks and public relations firms to help sow doubt about global warming and the actions needed to fight it.

These dynamics help explain why U.S. politicians have failed time after time to enact significant federal climate legislation, including President Biden’s stalled but desperately needed “Build Back Better” bill that includes $555 billion to spur growth in renewable energy and clean transportation. And they show that combating disinformation is a necessity if we are to break through lawmakers’ refusal to act, which is increasingly out of step with Americans’ surging levels of alarm and concern about the overheating of the planet.

“We’ve seen misinformation poisoning the information landscape for over three decades, and over that time the public has been getting more and more polarized,” said John Cook, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Climate Change Communication Research Hub at Monash University in Australia. “The U.S. is the strongest source of misinformation and recipient of misinformation. It’s also the most polarized on climate.”

Cook and his colleagues studied misinformation on conservative think-tank websites and contrarian blogs over the last 20 years and charted the evolution of the climate opposition from outright denial of the reality of human-caused climate change and toward attacking solutions such as renewable energy or seeking to discredit scientists.

Cook said his research has found the most effective way to counter climate obstruction misinformation is to educate people about how to identify and understand different tactics, such as the use of fake experts, cherry-picked facts, logical fallacies and conspiracy theories. For example, seeing words such as “natural” or “renewable” in fossil fuel advertising raises red flags that you’re being misled through greenwashing.

“It’s like teaching people the magician’s sleight-of-hand trick,” Cook said.

There have been important efforts recently to hold the fossil fuel industry accountable for disinformation. In a hearing that was modeled on tobacco industry testimony from a generation ago, House Democrats hauled in oil executives last fall to answer to allegations that their companies have concealed their knowledge of the risks of global warming to obstruct climate action (they, unsurprisingly, denied them).

Perhaps we are getting closer to a turning point, where public realization that we’ve been misinformed by polluting industries begins to overcome decades of planet-endangering deceit and delay. Having the world’s scientists finally begin to call out the problem certainly can’t hurt.

Marcelo Leite: Virada Psicodélica – Artigo aponta injustiça psicodélica contra saber indígena (Folha de S.Paulo)

www1.folha.uol.com.br

Marcelo Leite

7 de março de 2022


A cena tem algo de surreal: pesquisador europeu com o corpo tomado por grafismos indígenas tem na cabeça um gorro com dezenas de eletrodos para eletroencefalografia (EEG). Um membro do povo Huni Kuin sopra rapé na narina do branco, que traz nas costas mochila com aparelhos portáteis para registrar suas ondas cerebrais.

A Expedition Neuron aconteceu em abril de 2019, em Santa Rosa do Purus (AC). No programa, uma tentativa de diminuir o fosso entre saberes tradicionais sobre uso da ayahuasca e a consagração do chá pelo chamado renascimento psicodélico para a ciência.

O resultado mais palpável da iniciativa, até aqui, apareceu num controverso texto sobre ética, e não dados, de pesquisa.

O título do artigo no periódico Transcultural Psychiatry prometia: “Superando Injustiças Epistêmicas no Estudo Biomédico da Ayahuasca – No Rumo de Regulamentação Ética e Sustentável”. Desde a publicação, em 6 de janeiro, o texto gerou mais calor que luz –mesmo porque tem sido criticado fora das vistas do público, não às claras.

Os autores Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, do Instituto Phaneros, e Konstantin Gerber, da PUC-SP, questionam a autoridade da ciência com base na dificuldade de empregar placebo em experimentos com psicodélicos, na ênfase dada a aspectos moleculares e no mal avaliado peso do contexto (setting) para a segurança do uso, quesito em que cientistas teriam muito a aprender com indígenas.

Entre os alvos das críticas figuram pesquisas empreendidas na última década pelos grupos de Jaime Hallak na USP de Ribeirão Preto e de Dráulio de Araújo no Instituto do Cérebro da UFRN, em particular sobre efeito da ayahuasca na depressão. Procurados, cientistas e colaboradores desses grupos não responderam ou preferiram não se pronunciar.

O potencial antidepressivo da dimetiltriptamina (DMT), principal composto psicoativo do chá, está no foco também de pesquisadores de outros países. Mas outras substâncias psicodélicas, como MDMA e psilocibina, estão mais próximas de obter reconhecimento de reguladores como medicamentos psiquiátricos.

Dado o efeito óbvio de substâncias como a ayahuasca na mente e no comportamento da pessoa, argumentam Schenberg e Gerber, o sistema duplo-cego (padrão ouro de ensaios biomédicos) ficaria inviabilizado: tanto o voluntário quanto o experimentador quase sempre sabem se o primeiro tomou um composto ativo ou não. Isso aniquilaria o valor supremo atribuído a estudos desse tipo no campo psicodélico e na biomedicina em geral.

Outro ponto criticado por eles está na descontextualização e no reducionismo de experimentos realizados em hospitais ou laboratórios, com o paciente cercado de aparelhos e submetido a doses fixadas em miligramas por quilo de peso. A precisão é ilusória, afirmam, com base no erro de um artigo que cita concentração de 0,8 mg/ml de DMT e depois fala em 0,08 mg/ml.

A sanitização cultural do setting, por seu lado, faria pouco caso dos elementos contextuais (floresta, cânticos, cosmologia, rapé, danças, xamãs) que para povos como os Huni Kuin são indissociáveis do que a ayahuasca tem a oferecer e ensinar. Ao ignorá-los, cientistas estariam desprezando tudo o que os indígenas sabem sobre uso seguro e coletivo da substância.

Mais ainda, estariam ao mesmo tempo se apropriando e desrespeitando esse conhecimento tradicional. Uma atitude mais ética de pesquisadores implicaria reconhecer essa contribuição, desenvolver protocolos de pesquisa com participação indígena, registrar coautoria em publicações científicas, reconhecer propriedade intelectual e repartir eventuais lucros com tratamentos e patentes.

“A complementaridade entre antropologia, psicanálise e psiquiatria é um dos desafios da etnopsiquiatria”, escrevem Schenberg e Gerber. “A iniciativa de levar ciência biomédica à floresta pode ser criticada como uma tentativa de medicalizar o xamanismo, mas também pode constituir uma possibilidade de diálogo intercultural centrado na inovação e na resolução de ‘redes de problemas’.”

“É particularmente notável que a biomedicina se aventure agora em conceitos como ‘conexão’ e ‘identificação com a natureza’ [nature-relatedness] como efeito de psicodélicos, mais uma vez, portanto, se aproximando de conclusões epistêmicas derivadas de práticas xamânicas. O desafio final seria, assim, entender a relação entre bem-estar da comunidade e ecologia e como isso pode ser traduzido num conceito ocidental de saúde integrada.”

As reações dos poucos a criticar abertamente o texto e suas ideias grandiosas podem ser resumidas num velho dito maldoso da academia: há coisas boas e novas no artigo, mas as coisas boas não são novas e as coisas novas não são boas. Levar EEG para a floresta do Acre, por exemplo, não resolveria todos os problemas.

Schenberg é o elo de ligação entre o artigo na Transcultural Psychiatry e a Expedition Neuron, pois integrou a incursão ao Acre em 2019 e colabora nesse estudo de EEG com o pesquisador Tomas Palenicek, do Instituto Nacional de Saúde Mental da República Checa. Eis um vídeo de apresentação, em inglês:

“Estamos engajados, Konstantin e eu, em projeto inovador com os Huni Kuin e pesquisadores europeus, buscando construir uma parceria epistemicamente justa, há mais de três anos”, respondeu Schenberg quando questionado sobre o cumprimento, pelo estudo com EEG, das exigências éticas apresentadas no artigo.

Na apresentação da Expedition Neuron, ele afirma: “Nessa primeira expedição curta e exploratória [de 2019], confirmamos que há interesse mútuo de cientistas e uma cultura indígena tradicional da Amazônia em explorar conjuntamente a natureza da consciência e como sua cura tradicional funciona, incluindo –pela primeira vez– registros de atividade cerebral num cenário que muitos considerariam demasiado desafiador tecnicamente”.

“Consideramos de supremo valor investigar conjuntamente como os rituais e medicinas dos Huni Kuin afetam a cognição humana, as emoções e os vínculos de grupo e analisar a base neural desses estados alterados de consciência, incluindo possivelmente experiências místicas na floresta.”

Schenberg e seus colaboradores planejam nova expedição aos Huni Kuin para promover registros de EEG múltiplos e simultâneos com até sete indígenas durante cerimônias com ayahuasca. A ideia é testar a “possibilidade muito intrigante” de sincronia entre cérebros:

“Interpretada pelos Huni Kuin e outros povos ameríndios como um tipo de portal para o mundo espiritual, a ayahuasca é conhecida por fortalecer intensa e rapidamente vínculos comunitários e sentimentos de empatia e proximidade com os outros.”

Os propósitos de Schenberg e Gerber não convenceram a antropóloga brasileira Bia Labate, diretora do Instituto Chacruna em São Francisco (EUA). “Indígenas não parecem ter sido consultados para a produção do texto, não há vozes nativas, não são coautores, e não temos propostas específicas do que seria uma pesquisa verdadeiramente interétnica e intercultural.”

Para a antropóloga, ainda que a Expedition Neuron tenha conseguido autorização para a pesquisa, algo positivo, não configura “epistemologia alternativa à abordagem cientificista e etnocêntrica”. Uma pesquisa interétnica, em sua maneira de ver, implicaria promover uma etnografia que levasse a sério a noção indígena de que plantas são espíritos, têm agência própria, e que o mundo natural também é cultural, tem subjetividade, intencionalidade.

“Todos sabemos que a bebida ayahuasca não é a mesma coisa que ayahuasca freeze dried [liofilizada]; que o contexto importa; que os rituais e coletivos que participam fazem diferença. Coisas iguais ou análogas já haviam sido apontadas pela literatura antropológica, cujas referências foram deixadas de lado pelos autores.”

Labate também discorda de que os estudos com ayahuasca no Brasil negligenciem o reconhecimento de quem chegou antes a ela: “Do ponto de vista global, é justamente uma marca e um diferencial da pesquisa científica brasileira o fato de que houve, sim, diálogo com participantes das religiões ayahuasqueiras. Estes também são sujeitos legítimos de pesquisa, e não apenas os povos originários”.

Schenberg e Palenicek participaram em 2020 de um encontro com outra antropóloga, a franco-colombiana Emilia Sanabria, líder no projeto Encontros de Cura, do Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa Científica da França (CNRS). Ao lado do indígena Leopardo Yawa Bane, o trio debateu o estudo com EEG no painel virtual “Levando o Laboratório até a Ayahuasca”, da Conferência Interdisciplinar sobre Pesquisa Psicodélica (ICPR). Há vídeo disponível, em inglês:

Sanabria, que fala português e conhece os Huni Kuin, chegou a ser convidada por Schenberg para integrar a expedição, mas declinou, por avaliar que não se resolveria a “incomensurabilidade epistemológica” entre o pensamento indígena e o que a biomedicina quer provar. Entende que a discussão proposta na Transcultural Psychiatry é importante, apesar de complexa e não exatamente nova.

Em entrevista ao blog, afirmou que o artigo parece reinventar a roda, ao desconsiderar um longo debate sobre a assimilação de plantas e práticas tradicionais (como a medicina chinesa) pela ciência ocidental: “Não citam a reflexão anterior. É bom que ponham a discussão na mesa, mas há bibliografia de mais de um século”.

A antropóloga declarou ver problema na postura do artigo, ao apresentar-se como salvador dos nativos. “Não tem interlocutor indígena citado como autor”, pondera, corroborando a crítica de Labate, como se os povos originários precisassem ser representados por não índios. “A gente te dá um espacinho aqui no nosso mundo.”

A questão central de uma colaboração respeitosa, para Sanabria, é haver prioridade e utilidade no estudo também para os Huni Kuin, e não só para os cientistas.

Ao apresentar esse questionamento no painel, recebeu respostas genéricas de Schenberg e Palenicek, não direta e concretamente benéficas para os Huni Kuin –por exemplo, que a ciência pode ajudar na rejeição de patentes sobre ayahuasca.

Na visão da antropóloga, “é linda a ideia de levar o laboratório para condições naturalistas”, mas não fica claro como aquela maquinaria toda se enquadraria na lógica indígena. No fundo, trata-se de um argumento simétrico ao brandido pelos autores do artigo contra a pesquisa psicodélica em ambiente hospitalar: num caso se descontextualiza a experiência psicodélica total, socializada; no outro, é a descontextualização tecnológica que viaja e invade a aldeia.

Sanabria vê um dilema quase insolúvel, para povos indígenas, na pactuação de protocolos de pesquisa com a renascida ciência psicodélica. O que em 2014 parecia para muitos uma nova maneira de fazer ciência, com outros referenciais de avaliação e prova, sofreu uma “virada capitalista” desde 2018 e terminou dominado pela lógica bioquímica e de propriedade intelectual.

“Os povos indígenas não podem cair fora porque perdem seus direitos. Mas também não podem entrar [nessa lógica], porque aí perdem sua perspectiva identitária.”

“Molecularizar na floresta ou no laboratório dá no mesmo”, diz Sanabria. “Não vejo como reparação de qualquer injustiça epistêmica. Não vejo diferença radical entre essa pesquisa e o estudo da Fernanda [Palhano-Fontes]”, referindo-se à crítica “agressiva” de Schenberg e Gerber ao teste clínico de ayahuasca para depressão no Instituto do Cérebro da UFRN, extensiva aos trabalhos da USP de Ribeirão Preto.

A dupla destacou, por exemplo, o fato de autores do estudo da UFRN indicarem no artigo de 2019 que 4 dos 29 voluntários no experimento ficaram pelo menos uma semana internados no Hospital Universitário Onofre Lopes, em Natal. Lançaram, com isso, a suspeita de que a segurança na administração de ayahuasca tivesse sido inadequadamente tratada.

“Nenhum desses estudos tentou formalmente comparar a segurança no ambiente de laboratório com qualquer um dos contextos culturais em que ayahuasca é comumente usada”, pontificaram Schenberg e Gerber. “Porém, segundo nosso melhor conhecimento, nunca se relatou que 14% das pessoas participantes de um ritual de ayahuasca tenham requerido uma semana de hospitalização.”

O motivo de internação, contudo, foi trivial: pacientes portadores de depressão resistente a medicamentos convencionais, eles já estavam hospitalizados devido à gravidade de seu transtorno mental e permaneceram internados após a intervenção. Ou seja, a internação não teve a ver com terem tomado ayahuasca.

Este blog também questionou Schenberg sobre o possível exagero em pinçar um erro que poderia ser de digitação (0,8 mg/ml ou 0,08 mg/ml), no artigo de 2015 da USP de Ribeirão, como flagrante de imprecisão que poria em dúvida a superioridade epistêmica da biomedicina psicodélica.

“Se dessem mais atenção aos relatos dos voluntários/pacientes, talvez tivessem se percebido do fato”, retorquiu o pesquisador do Instituto Phaneros. “Além da injustiça epistêmica com os indígenas, existe a injustiça epistêmica com os voluntários/pacientes, que também discutimos brevemente no artigo.”

Schenberg tem vários trabalhos publicados que se encaixariam no paradigma biomédico agora em sua mira. Seria seu artigo com Gerber uma autocrítica sobre a atividade pregressa?

“Sempre fui crítico de certas limitações biomédicas e foi somente com muito esforço que consegui fazer meu pós-doc sem, por exemplo, usar um grupo placebo, apesar de a maioria dos colegas insistirem que assim eu deveria fazer, caso contrário ‘não seria científico’…”.

“No fundo, o argumento é circular, usando a biomedicina como critério último para dar respostas à crítica à biomedicina”, contesta Bia Labate. “O texto não resolve o que se propõe a resolver, mas aprofunda o gap [desvão] entre epistemologias originárias e biomédicas ao advogar por novas maneiras de produzir biomedicina a partir de critérios de validação… biomédicos.”

World’s nations start to hammer out first global treaty on plastic pollution (Science)

science.org

“Ambitious” efforts could set waste reduction targets, establish scientific advisory body

23 Feb 2022

By Erik Stokstad

Plastic waste piles up on a beach off Panama City. Nations will try to negotiate a new treaty aimed at reducing the global problem. LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Each year, an estimated 11 million tons of plastic waste enter the ocean, equivalent to a cargo ship’s worth every day. The rising tide—in the oceans and beyond—is just a symptom of much wider problems: unsustainable product design, short-sighted consumption, and insufficient waste management, scientists say. To curb the flood, says Jenna Jambeck, an environmental engineer at the University of Georgia, “we need to take more action and it needs to be further upstream” in the production process.

That’s exactly what negotiators from 193 countries are setting out to do when they meet in Nairobi, Kenya, next week. Their ambitious goal: to create a negotiating committee that will try to hammer out, within 2 years, a new global treaty intended to curb plastic pollution.

An already released proposal, modeled on the United Nations’s climate treaty, would have nations adopt action plans, set binding waste reduction targets, and establish monitoring systems and a new global scientific advisory body. “It’s about time,” says Chelsea Rochman, an ecologist at the University of Toronto who has called on nations to tackle the issue.

Existing international efforts to reduce marine litter and exposure to hazardous chemicals include some measures related to plastic pollution. But no global treaty tries to reduce pollution by targeting a product’s entire life cycle, from its birth as a raw material to its death—if it becomes trash. Taking such a broad approach to plastics, says Anja Brandon, a policy analyst at the Ocean Conservancy, “is going to be a much bigger scientific endeavor.”

For one thing, rigorous, comparable numbers on the scope and sources of the problem are scarce, making it difficult to identify pollution hot spots or detect trends. Nonprofit groups and government agencies use dozens of varying protocols for surveying beach litter, for example. Methods of counting microplastics in water—shed from synthetic fabrics, for example, or formed when large plastic objects degrade—also vary. “There are several holes in the data,” Jambeck says.

The new treaty could help by promoting or establishing standard measuring and accounting methods. One such approach, called environmental economic accounting, is already being used in some countries to track various raw materials. And a method known as mass balance analysis, which tracks the amount of material entering and leaving production processes, holds promise for quantifying the amount of recycled plastic used in new products.

Even after scientists settle on standard metrics, collecting those numbers could be a challenge, Jambeck notes, especially in developing nations with relatively weak regulatory and research infrastructures. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which is hosting the upcoming meeting, has worked to increase monitoring capacity with training programs and online courses. Such efforts would be aided by a new treaty that encourages funding and technological advances. Remote sensing via satellites and drones, for example, could more easily identify plastic pollution trends, reducing the need for labor-intensive ground surveys.

More detailed industrial data on plastics production, transport, and consumption could also help nations curb pollution, researchers say. But many countries allow companies to keep such numbers private, making it difficult to calculate how plastic is moving through the economy and into the environment. And no one systematically tracks that information. The Ocean Conservancy, for example, has struggled to find out how much recycled plastic firms are using, Brandon says. Researchers are still pondering which numbers would be most useful, and how the treaty might help make that information more available.

Negotiators will also confront a key question: How much plastic pollution is too much? It’s clear that plastic bags, discarded fishing gear, and microplastics can kill wildlife, but scientists are just beginning to figure out how to calculate the risks. The treaty could help catalyze such efforts, says Rochman, who recently helped California regulators devise protocols for setting microplastic thresholds to protect people and ecosystems.

The political will to reduce plastic waste will be much higher if it’s known to harm humans, says Karen Raubenheimer, a policy researcher at the University of Wollongong. But she thinks any final agreement is unlikely to call for hard caps on new plastic. “It will be challenging in the short-term to stop using virgin plastic,” Raubenheimer says.

A big reason is that many uses of plastic are seen as essential. Single-use plastic items are common in health care, for example, to prevent contamination and infections, and in the food industry to keep fruit, vegetables, and other products from spoiling. Even disposable bottles can be vital in areas without clean water.

Negotiators might call for the reduction or elimination of what UNEP has called “unnecessary, avoidable and problematic plastic,” such as single-use shopping bags, takeout cutlery, or plastic beads in cosmetics. But analysts say nations must also focus on ways to reuse and recycle plastic materials. Currently, researchers estimate that less than 10% of plastic products are recycled. Smarter product designs that drive better waste management practices could boost that number, reducing the demand for virgin materials.

Trying to finalize the new treaty in just 2 years is “highly ambitious,” UNEP admits. But researchers who have watched the plastic pile up are delighted that the talks are even getting started. “People are putting high level resources to try to solve this problem in a way that we didn’t see a decade ago,” says Kara Lavender Law, a physical oceanographer at the Sea Education Association. “It’s actually astonishing.”

How a little-discussed revision of climate science could help avert doom (Washington Post)

washingtonpost.com

Mark Hertsgaard, Saleemul Huq, Michael E. Mann

Feb. 23, 2022

We can reduce global temperatures faster than we once thought — if we act now

One of the biggest obstacles to avoiding global climate breakdown is that so many people think there’s nothing we can do about it.

They point out that record-breaking heat waves, fires and storms are already devastating communities and economies throughout the world. And they’ve long been told that temperatures will keep rising for decades to come, no matter how many solar panels replace oil derricks or how many meat-eaters go vegetarian. No wonder they think we’re doomed.

But climate science actually doesn’t say this. To the contrary, the best climate science you’ve probably never heard of suggests that humanity can still limit the damage to a fraction of the worst projections if — and, we admit, this is a big if — governments, businesses and all of us take strong action starting now.

For many years, the scientific rule of thumb was that a sizable amount of temperature rise was locked into the Earth’s climate system. Scientists believed — and told policymakers and journalists, who in turn told the public — that even if humanity hypothetically halted all heat-trapping emissions overnight, carbon dioxide’s long lifetime in the atmosphere, combined with the sluggish thermal properties of the oceans, would nevertheless keep global temperatures rising for 30 to 40 more years. Since shifting to a zero-carbon global economy would take at least a decade or two, temperatures were bound to keep rising for at least another half-century.

But guided by subsequent research, scientists dramatically revised that lag time estimate down to as little as three to five years. That is an enormous difference that carries paradigm-shifting and broadly hopeful implications for how people, especially young people, think and feel about the climate emergency and how societies can respond to it.

This revised science means that if humanity slashes emissions to zero, global temperatures will stop rising almost immediately. To be clear, this is not a get-out-of-jail-free card. Global temperatures will not fall if emissions go to zero, so the planet’s ice will keep melting and sea levels will keep rising. But global temperatures will stop their relentless climb, buying humanity time to devise ways to deal with such unavoidable impacts. In short, we are not irrevocably doomed — or at least we don’t have to be, if we take bold, rapid action.

The science we’re referencing was included — but buried — in the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s most recent report, issued in August. Indeed, it was first featured in the IPCC’s landmark 2018 report, “Global warming of 1.5 C.”That report’s key finding — that global emissions must fall by 45 percent by 2030 to avoid catastrophic climate disruption — generated headlines declaring that we had “12 years to save the planet.” That 12-year timeline, and the related concept of a “carbon budget” — the amount of carbon that can be burned while still limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels — were both rooted in this revised science. Meanwhile, the public and policy worlds have largely neglected the revised science that enabled these very estimates.

Nonscientists can reasonably ask: What made scientists change their minds? Why should we believe their new estimate of a three-to-five-year lag time if their previous estimate of 30 to 40 years is now known to be incorrect? And does this mean the world still must cut emissions in half by 2030 to avoid climate catastrophe?

The short answer to the last question is yes. Remember, temperatures only stop rising once global emissions fall to zero. Currently, emissions are not falling. Instead, humanity continues to pump approximately 36 billion tons of carbon dioxide a year into the atmosphere. The longer it takes to cut those 36 billion tons to zero, the more temperature rise humanity eventually will face. And as the IPCC’s 2018 report made hauntingly clear, pushing temperatures above 1.5 degrees C would cause unspeakable amounts of human suffering, economic loss and social breakdown — and perhaps trigger genuinely irreversible impacts.

Scientists changed their minds about how much warming is locked in because additional research gave them a much better understanding of how the climate system works. Their initial 30-to-40-year estimates were based on relatively simple computer models that treated the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere as a “control knob” that determines temperature levels. The long lag in the warming impact is due to the oceans, which continue to warm long after the control knob is turned up. More recent climate models account for the more dynamic nature of carbon emissions. Yes, CO2 pushes temperatures higher, but carbon “sinks,” including forests and in particular the oceans, absorb almost half of the CO2 that is emitted, causing atmospheric CO2 levels to drop, offsetting the delayed warming effect.

Knowing that 30 more years of rising temperatures are not necessarily locked in can be a game-changer for how people, governments and businesses respond to the climate crisis. Understanding that we can still save our civilization if we take strong, fast action can banish the psychological despair that paralyzes people and instead motivate them to get involved. Lifestyle changes can help, but that involvement must also include political engagement. Slashing emissions in half by 2030 demands the fastest possible transition away from today’s fossil-fueled economies in favor of wind, solar and other non-carbon alternatives. That can happen only if governments enact dramatically different policies. If citizens understand that things aren’t hopeless, they can better push elected officials to make such changes.

As important as minimizing temperature rise is to the United States, where last year’s record wildfires in California and the Pacific Northwest illustrated just how deadly climate change can be, it matters most in the highly climate-vulnerable communities throughout the global South. Countless people in Bangladesh, the Philippines, Madagascar, Africa’s Sahel nations, Brazil, Honduras and other low-income countries have already been suffering from climate disasters for decades because their communities tend to be more exposed to climate impacts and have less financial capacity to protect themselves. For millions of people in such countries, limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees C is not a scientific abstraction.

The IPCC’s next report, due for release Feb. 28, will address how societies can adapt to the temperature rise now underway and the fires, storms and rising seas it unleashes. If we want a livable future for today’s young people, temperature rise must be kept as close as possible to 1.5 C. The best climate science most people have never heard of says that goal remains within reach. The question is whether enough of us will act on that knowledge in time.

Opinião – Pablo Acosta: Ciências comportamentais podem complementar forma tradicional de fazer política (Folha de S.Paulo)

www1.folha.uol.com.br

22.fev.2022 às 4h00


Tradicionalmente, os gestores elaboram políticas públicas tendo como base um agente econômico racional, ou seja, uma pessoa capaz de avaliar cada decisão, maximizando sua utilidade para interesse próprio. Ignoram, porém, as poderosas influências psicológicas e sociais que afetam o comportamento humano e desconsideram que pessoas são falíveis, inconstantes e emocionais: têm problemas com autocontrole, procrastinam, preferem o status quo e são seres sociais. É com base nesse agente “não tão racional” que as ciências comportamentais se apresentam para complementar a forma tradicional de fazer política.

Por exemplo: já nos aproximamos da marca de dois anos desde a declaração pela Organização Mundial da Saúde de estado de pandemia da Covid-19 em 11 de março de 2020. Foram anos desafiadores para governos, empresas e indivíduos. Mas apesar de 2021 ter apresentado sinais de recuperação, há ainda um longo e árduo caminho a ser percorrido para retornar ao menos às condições pré-pandemia. Não apenas na saúde, mas também no equilíbrio das economias, no aumento da produtividade, na retomada de empregos, na recuperação das lacunas de aprendizagem, na melhora do ambiente de negócios, no combate às mudanças climáticas, etc. Obviamente, essa não é uma tarefa simples para governos e organizações. Poderíamos encarar esses desafios de forma diferente e adaptar a maneira de fazer políticas públicas para torná-las mais eficientes e custo-efetivas, aumentando seus impactos e alcance?

A resposta é sim. O sucesso de políticas públicas depende, em parte, da tomada de decisão e da mudança de comportamentos. Por isso, focar mais nas pessoas e no contexto da tomada de decisão se torna cada vez mais imperativo. É importante considerar como pessoas se relacionam entre si e com instituições, como se portam frente às políticas e conhecer bem o ambiente em que estão inseridas.

A abordagem comportamental é científica e alia conceitos da psicologia, economia, antropologia, sociologia e neurociência. Orientada pelo contexto e baseada em evidências, concilia teoria e prática em diversos setores. Sua aplicação pode abranger uma simples mudança no ambiente da tomada de decisão (arquitetura de escolhas), um “empurrãozinho” (nudge) para influenciar a melhor decisão para o indivíduo, mantendo liberdade de escolhas, e pode ser mais ampla, visando a mudança de hábito. Para além disso, pode ser chave no enfrentamento de desafios de políticas como abandono escolar, violência doméstica e de gênero, pagamento de impostos, redução de corrupção, desastres naturais, mudanças climáticas, entre outros.

O uso de insights comportamentais em políticas públicas já não é mais novidade. Mais de uma década se passou desde a publicação (2008) do livro Nudge (“Nudge: como tomar melhores decisões sobre saúde, dinheiro e felicidade”, em português), que impulsionou o campo de forma espetacular. Conceitos da psicologia, já amplamente discutidos e aceitos por décadas, foram utilizados no contexto das decisões econômicas e, assim, a economia/ciência comportamental se consolidou.

Acompanhando a expansão e relevância do tema, o Banco Mundial, lançou em 2015 o Relatório sobre o Desenvolvimento Mundial: Mente, Sociedade e Comportamento. Em 2016, iniciou sua própria unidade comportamental, a eMBeD (Unidade Mente, Comportamento e Desenvolvimento) e tem promovido o uso sistemático de insights comportamentais em políticas e projetos de desenvolvimento e apoiado diversos países para solucionar problemas de forma rápida e escalável.

No Brasil, temos atuado na capacitação de gestores para o uso de insights comportamentais, em contribuições em pesquisas, como na Pesquisa sobre Ética e Corrupção no Serviço Público Federal (Banco Mundial e CGU) e em apoio técnico na identificação de evidências, como para informar soluções para aumentar a poupança entre a população de baixa renda. Nossos especialistas prepararam também diagnósticos comportamentais para entender por que clientes não pagam a conta em dia ou deixam de se conectar ao sistema de esgoto. Realizamos experimentos com mensagens comportamentais a fim de estimular a utilização de meios digitais de pagamentos e incentivar o pagamento de contas em dia no setor de água e saneamento. Neste último, apresentando resultados positivos com possibilidade de aumento de arrecadação a um custo baixo, já que as mensagens ressaltando consequências e reciprocidade, por exemplo, aumentaram os pagamentos em dia e a quantia total paga. Para cada mil clientes que receberam o SMS com insights comportamentais, de seis a 11 clientes a mais pagaram as contas. Para 2022, há atividades planejadas, como parte de um projeto de desenvolvimento, que usará insights comportamentais para reduzir o descarte de resíduos em sistemas de drenagem e aumentar o uso consciente de espaços públicos.

As ciências comportamentais não são a solução para os grandes desafios globais. Mas é preciso ressaltar o potencial de sua complementariedade na construção de políticas públicas. Cabe aos gestores aproveitarem esse momento de maior maturidade da área para expandirem seus conhecimentos. Vale ainda surfar na onda de ascensão de áreas complementares, como cesign e ciência de dados, para centrar o olhar no indivíduo e no contexto da decisão e, baseando-se em evidências e de maneira transparente, influenciar as escolhas e promover mudança de comportamento, de forma a aumentar o impacto das políticas públicas a fim de não só retomar as condições pré-Covid, mas melhorar ainda mais a vida e o bem-estar de todos, especialmente da população mais pobre e vulnerável.

Esta coluna foi escrita em colaboração com meus colegas do Banco Mundial Juliana Neves Soares Brescianini, analista de operações, e Luis A. Andrés, líder de programa do setor de Infraestrutura.

Preceitos da Pombagira: mulheres de terreiros e lutas (Outras Palavras)

outraspalavras.net

por AzMina

Publicado 17/02/2022 às 15:11 – Atualizado 17/02/2022 às 15:23

Visita a espaços de culto de religiões de matriz africana – que historicamente têm mulheres como líderes. As Iaôs e Ialorixás tornam-se referências nas lutas pelo direito à igualdade religiosa, de raça e de gênero

Por Aymê Brito, no AzMina

“Exu (…) exerce forte domínio sobre as mulheres e as moças”, dizia uma coluna de opinião no jornal O Estado de São Paulo, em 1973. Escrito no período da Ditadura Militar no Brasil, o artigo demonizava as religiões de matriz africana e demonstrava preocupação que as mulheres abandonassem o “lar” em troca da vida nos terreiros. Quase cinco décadas depois, o machismo e o racismo seguem presentes na vida das mulheres que escolhem fazer parte das religiões afro-brasileiras, mas elas resistem e lideram terreiros.

Não é comum vê-las em cargos de liderança em outras religiões, como na Igreja Católica com padres e papas homens. Já nas religiões de matriz africana, as mulheres quase sempre são maioria, ocupando os postos mais altos. Quem frequenta os barracões (como também são chamados os terreiros) percebe isso.

Seja como mulheres de santo, senhoras do ilê, sacerdotisas ou herdeiras do axé, elas conquistaram um protagonismo que não ficou restrito aos terreiros. Axé Muntu! Essa é uma expressão criada pela intelectual Lélia Gonzalez – uma mistura das línguas Iorubá (axé: poder, energia) com o dialeto Kimbundo (muntu: gente). A socióloga e ativista usou muito de sua vivência como mulher do candomblé na produção intelectual que fez sobre a vida e posição das mulheres negras na sociedade brasileira.

Nesta reportagem trazemos as falas de Mãe Du, Nailah, Kenya e Renata, que, assim como Lélia, mostram que a influência dos povos de terreiros pode ser encontrada hoje no espaço acadêmico, na militância, na política, na culinária e em vários outros campos da sociedade.

Num país marcado por profundas desigualdades sociorraciais como o Brasil, os terreiros e as mulheres à frente deles – as macumbeiras, como elas mesmas se chamam – desempenham um papel social muito além da religião. Elas realizam uma verdadeira “feitiçaria” ao conciliar a tradição de diferentes povos, resistir às opressões e ajudar a proporcionar um espaço de acolhimento a quem sempre foi excluído.

Perseguição à cultura e às mulheres

A perseguição aos terreiros e barracões, que já dura mais de 500 anos, e as campanhas de difamação na imprensa geraram uma falta de conhecimento generalizada. “A umbanda, com seus sucedâneos e religiões assemelhadas, é entre nós um subproduto da ignorância associada à politicalha. Seu terreno de eleição já foi o quilombo e o mocambo. Modernamente é a favela e o escritório eleitoral” – dizia mais um trecho da coluna do jornal paulista, publicada logo após uma festa em comemoração ao Dia de Oxóssi.

Noticiários racistas como esse não eram (e não são) raros. Resquícios de uma sociedade que até 1832 obrigava todos a se converterem à religião oficial do Estado – na época, a Cristã. Isso fez com que outras expressões religiosas fossem criminalizadas, sofrendo com opressão policial e apreensão de objetos sagrados – que até hoje nunca foram devolvidos.

A cientista política e também praticante do Candomblé, Nailah Neves, Ìyàwó ty Ọ̀ṣun (seu nome de santo), afirma que essa perseguição também era resultado do fato de as mulheres serem maioria e liderarem as casas de axé. “Terreiros, quilombos e escolas de samba, que eram espaços de resistência e de valorização da cultura negra matriarcal, eram um grande risco para o projeto eugenista e patriarcal do Estado brasileiro.”

Passados 34 anos da Constituição Federal que, em seu artigo 5, passou a garantir a liberdade de crença e proteção aos locais de cultos religiosos diversos, a discriminação não teve fim. Em 2021, um estudo da Comissão de Combate à Intolerância Religiosa apontou que 91% dos ataques que ocorreram no estado do Rio de Janeiro eram contra as mesmas religiões – as de Racistradição africana. 

Ensinamentos da pombagira

Kenya Odara (primeira na imagem), de 23 anos, é uma das cofundadoras do coletivo de mulheres negras Siriricas Co e atualmente frequenta o terreiro de Candomblé Àse Efon Omibainà, composto apenas por mulheres. “Quando estamos nos terreiros não nos preocupamos só com a questão religiosa, somos mulheres negras, toda a nossa existência é política.” Foto: Divulgação/ Arquivo Pessoal

Embora as investidas contra os afro-religiosos não tenham sido poucas, os terreiros e as mulheres continuam passando de geração em geração os preceitos e fundamentos do povo de axé. Renata Pallottine, de 36 anos, é bisneta de Dona Maria, Mãe de Santo, de uma casa de umbanda no interior de São Paulo, e cresceu aprendendo os valores civilizatórios desta comunidade.

Advogada pelos direitos das mulheres e atuante no combate ao racismo religioso, Renata atualmente é responsável pela área jurídica do coletivo Terreiro Resiste, movimento de defesa das comunidades tradicionais. Hoje, como uma das filhas de santo mais velhas de um terreiro na capital paulista, ela conta que foi essa vivência que contribuiu para o seu engajamento na luta:

“Quem nasce umbandista já aprende com a Pombagira que a desigualdade de gênero mata, aniquila e silencia, e que mulheres, sobretudo as racializadas, devem ocupar lugar de poder e decisão dentro das nossas comunidades.”

A Pombagira é uma das entidades cultuadas nessas religiões, que representa as encruzilhadas e é conhecida por simbolizar uma figura feminina ligada ao prazer e à liberdade sexual. Renata explica que a figura da pombagira em muitos lugares é temida exatamente por romper com a lógica patriarcal: “mulher que poeticamente nos ensina a autonomia dos corpos femininos”.

Renata também chama atenção para a história dessas religiões, que vêm de uma cultura de valorização de povos ancestrais socialmente excluídos, mas passou por um forte embranquecimento nos últimos anos. “Em 1908, um homem branco, militar, espírita, de São Gonçalo, teria fundado a religião só porque deu nome às práticas que já existiam nos morros cariocas. Como é possível fundar algo que já existe?”, questionou a advogada.

A família de santo

Eu, repórter desta matéria, cresci ouvindo as histórias das macumbeiras, contadas por Elza Mendes, baiana de 72 anos, mulher negra e minha avó. Ela lida com a ignorância da sociedade sobre sua cultura há pelo menos 50 anos. “Ninguém vê com bons olhos, ainda hoje as pessoas têm muito medo, acham que é magia”, desabafa. Mas ressalta sempre o sentimento que há no terreiro de pertencer a uma comunidade. “Quando você abraça um terreiro, você começa a fazer parte de uma comunidade”, diz ela.

Hoje candomblecista, Elza foi a primeira a se tornar uma Iaô num dia de feitura, recebendo o título de dofona.

Glossário:

Iorubá: é um grupo étnico-linguístico da África Ocidental, principalmente na Nigéria e no Congo. Varia conforme o local e é usada nos rituais de matrizes africanas.

– Feitura no santo: é a iniciação de alguém no culto aos orixás. Pode vir com novo nome e assume novas funções. O ritual varia segundo a religião e pode durar até três meses.

Orixás (em iorubá: Òrìṣà): divindades representadas pela natureza, acredita-se que tenham existido anteriormente em Orum (céu em iorubá).

Aborós: orixás de energia masculina. Podem ser incorporados por pessoas de todos os gêneros.

Ayabás: orixás de energia feminina. Podem ser incorporados por pessoas de todos os gêneros.

Dona Elza conta que quando se começa a fazer parte de um terreiro você se torna também integrante de uma família de santo. “Tanto é que a gente diz irmão, tio, filho de santo”, comentou. Em muitos lugares os terreiros são conhecidos por serem receptivos a todo tipo de gente. “Uma mãe de santo nunca deixa de acolher um filho, mesmo se não tiver onde morar, será bem recebido no terreiro.”

Esse acolhimento está intimamente ligado à presença das mulheres na religião e a própria história dos negros no Brasil, conforme explica a pesquisadora Jacyara Silva, professora e coordenadora do núcleo de estudos afro-brasileiros da Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo (UFES). “É importante lembrar que as famílias dos negros que chegavam ao Brasil eram separadas por estratégia de dominação.”

Após o sequestro da população negra do continente africano, a formação das “famílias de santo” foi o jeito encontrado para preservar a identidade cultural e reconstruir essa ideia de família que havia sido destruída na escravidão. As grandes responsáveis por refazer esses laços familiares, dentro das religiões afro-brasileiras, foram as mulheres negras, as Yalorixás. Os barracões passaram a se tornar presentes na maior parte das regiões periféricas do país, acolhendo as pessoas que eram estigmatizadas pela sociedade, como mães solo e o público LGBTQIA+. 

“Não quer dizer que não existam nos terreiros os mesmos problemas que existem fora deles”, explicou Jacyara. As religiões de matriz africana estão inseridas dentro de uma sociedade onde racismo, machismo e transfobia são estruturais. Por isso, o cotidiano dos terreiros não está isento dessas questões. Mas, “pode estar na estrutura, mas não é institucionalizado”, ponderou a pesquisadora.

Debatendo fora dos terreiros

Maria do Carmo, Omó de Omolú Iemanjá Oxalá, conhecida como Mãe Du, é uma das mulheres à frente de um terreiro de Umbanda, na cidade de Viçosa, no interior de Minas Gerais. Apesar do grande respeito que conquistou entre os seus, teve que encarar o preconceito das mães e professoras da escola em que a sua filha estudava. “As pessoas ficaram meio cismadas”, conta.

A força de seguir por mais de 20 anos na defesa dos povos de terreiros vem da crença de que o amanhã será melhor que o hoje. A trajetória dela no culto aos orixás já tem, na verdade, 50 anos. “Fui a primeira Yaô daqui, andei pela cidade toda de branquinho.” Atualmente Mãe Du está na Umbanda, mas foi iniciada dentro do Candomblé, onde teve que passar por diversos processos até se tornar de fato umaIaô – filha de santo. Se tornar feita no santo é uma vitória para a maioria das mulheres de axé, por ser um processo de várias etapas, que requer muito tempo de dedicação e prática dentro do terreiro.

Ela também é líder espiritualista e integra o Conselho Municipal de Promoção da Igualdade Racial de Viçosa. Os cargos fora do terreiro são um marco e uma representação importante para quem é de religiões de matriz africana, mas também são espaços arriscados. “Defender aquilo que se é, hoje em dia, é perigoso, principalmente para nós mulheres.”

O preconceito acaba afastando outros praticantes dos encontros e debates religiosos, por preferirem se resguardar. Mas, Mãe Du – que tem viajado nos últimos anos para falar das religiões de matriz africana nas universidades – sente que agora as pessoas começaram a querer entender mais sobre sua cultura.

Hierarquia ancestral

Em boa parte da tradição africana, a hierarquia não se baseia no gênero, mas sim na experiência e conhecimento. “O matriarcalismo é natural de vários povos africanos, até porque a hierarquia não é por gênero como os europeus impuseram, é por ancestralidade”, explicou a candomblecista Nailah Neves.

As religiões de matriz africana não dividem o mundo entre bem e mal, emoção e ciência, corpo e alma, homens e mulheres. Nailah argumenta que essa lógica binária foi imposta aos povos que estavam sendo colonizados, por influência do eurocentrismo cristão. Existe na Umbanda e no Candomblé uma outra forma de ver e se relacionar com o mundo. “Não são apenas religiões, são povos e comunidades tradicionais, assim como são os quilombos.”

As religiões afro-brasileiras que conhecemos hoje são fruto das características de diversos povos africanos que se encontram no país e, exatamente por isso, elas variam conforme a nação ou tradição de origem, como acontece no caso do Candomblé, da Umbanda, do Batuque e do Xangô.

Sem nenhum tipo de livro oficial, como a Bíblia, os fundamentos são passados por gerações via tradição oral, e nem sempre são os mesmos em todos os lugares. Os preceitos e costumes não estão “escritos em pedra”.

AÇÕES E ESPAÇOS OCUPADOS PELAS MULHERES DE AXÉ NOS ÚLTIMOS ANOS:

  • No Brasil, o Dia Nacional de Combate à Intolerância Religiosa, 21 de janeiro, data que assegura a diversidade religiosa, foi criado em homenagem a uma líder religiosa, a Mãe Gilda. Em 1999, ela teve seu terreiro em Salvador invadido e depredado por fundamentalistas religiosos e acabou falecendo no ano seguinte.
  • Em 2021, a Organização das Mulheres de Axé do Brasil (MAB) realizou uma campanha de combate a violência menstrual. Elas distribuíram mais de 23 mil pacotes de absorventes higiênicos para pessoas em situação de vulnerabilidade econômica e social.
  • O Fórum Nacional de Segurança Alimentar e Nutricional dos Povos Tradicionais de Matriz Africana (FONSANPOTMA), presidido pela médica e líder religiosa Kato Mulanji, é uma das organizações que lutam para garantir soberania alimentar aos povos tradicionais.
  • Desde 2017, as mulheres de axé conquistaram o reconhecimento da profissão de baiana de acarajé e passaram a ter direitos aos benefícios profissionais. Em 2005 elas já tinham sido reconhecidas como Patrimônio Cultural Imaterial do Brasil.
  • Pelo país todo, terreiros são responsáveis por projetos de atendimento à comunidade, oficinas, distribuição de alimentos e ações de combate a violência. O Ilê Omolu Oxum, liderado pela ialorixá Mãe Meninazinha de Oxum, em atividade na Baixada Fluminense desde 1968, é um dos que oferece orientação às mulheres vítimas de violência. 

Orangutans instinctively use hammers to strike and sharp stones to cut, study finds (Science Daily)

Untrained, captive orangutans complete major steps in making and using stone tools

Date: February 16, 2022

Source: PLOS

Summary: Untrained, captive orangutans can complete two major steps in the sequence of stone tool use: striking rocks together and cutting using a sharp stone, according to a new study.


Untrained, captive orangutans can complete two major steps in the sequence of stone tool use: striking rocks together and cutting using a sharp stone, according to a study by Alba Motes-Rodrigo at the University of Tübingen in Germany and colleagues, publishing February 16 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE.

The researchers tested tool making and use in two captive male orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) at Kristiansand Zoo in Norway. Neither had previously been trained or exposed to demonstrations of the target behaviors. Each orangutan was provided with a concrete hammer, a prepared stone core, and two baited puzzle boxes requiring them to cut through a rope or a silicon skin in order to access a food reward. Both orangutans spontaneously hit the hammer against the walls and floor of their enclosure, but neither directed strikes towards the stone core. In a second experiment, the orangutans were also given a human-made sharp flint flake, which one orangutan used to cut the silicon skin, solving the puzzle. This is the first demonstration of cutting behavior in untrained, unenculturated orangutans.

To then investigate whether apes could learn the remaining steps from observing others, the researchers demonstrated how to strike the core to create a flint flake to three female orangutans at Twycross Zoo in the UK. After these demonstrations, one female went on to use the hammer to hit the core, directing the blows towards the edge as demonstrated.

This study is the first to report spontaneous stone tool use without close direction in orangutans that have not been enculturated by humans. The authors say their observations suggest that two major prerequisites for the emergence of stone tool use — striking with stone hammers and recognizing sharp stones as cutting tools — may have existed in our last common ancestor with orangutans, 13 million years ago.

The authors add: “Our study is the first to report that untrained orangutans can spontaneously use sharp stones as cutting tools. We also found that they readily engage in lithic percussion and that this activity occasionally leads to the detachment of sharp stone pieces.”



Journal Reference:

  1. Alba Motes-Rodrigo, Shannon P. McPherron, Will Archer, R. Adriana Hernandez-Aguilar, Claudio Tennie. Experimental investigation of orangutans’ lithic percussive and sharp stone tool behaviours. PLOS ONE, 2022; 17 (2): e0263343 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263343

Flies possess more sophisticated cognitive abilities than previously known (Science Daily)

Immersive virtual reality and real-time brain activity imaging showcase Drosophila’s capabilities of attention, working memory and awareness

Date: February 17, 2022

Source: University of California – San Diego

Summary: Common flies feature more advanced cognitive abilities than previously believed. Using a custom-built immersive virtual reality arena, neurogenetics and real-time brain activity imaging, researchers found attention, working memory and conscious awareness-like capabilities in fruit flies.


Fruit fly (stock image). Credit: © Arif_Vector / stock.adobe.com

As they annoyingly buzz around a batch of bananas in our kitchens, fruit flies appear to have little in common with mammals. But as a model species for science, researchers are discovering increasing similarities between us and the miniscule fruit-loving insects.

In a new study, researchers at the University of California San Diego’s Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind (KIBM) have found that fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) have more advanced cognitive abilities than previously believed. Using a custom-built immersive virtual reality environment, neurogenetic manipulations and in vivo real-time brain-activity imaging, the scientists present new evidence Feb. 16 in the journal Nature of the remarkable links between the cognitive abilities of flies and mammals.

The multi-tiered approach of their investigations found attention, working memory and conscious awareness-like capabilities in fruit flies, cognitive abilities typically only tested in mammals. The researchers were able to watch the formation, distractibility and eventual fading of a memory trace in their tiny brains.

“Despite a lack of obvious anatomical similarity, this research speaks to our everyday cognitive functioning — what we pay attention to and how we do it,” said study senior author Ralph Greenspan, a professor in the UC San Diego Division of Biological Sciences and associate director of KIBM. “Since all brains evolved from a common ancestor, we can draw correspondences between fly and mammalian brain regions based on molecular characteristics and how we store our memories.”

To arrive at the heart of their new findings the researchers created an immersive virtual reality environment to test the fly’s behavior via visual stimulation and coupled the displayed imagery with an infra-red laser as an averse heat stimulus. The near 360-degree panoramic arena allowed Drosophila to flap their wings freely while remaining tethered, and with the virtual reality constantly updating based on their wing movement (analyzed in real-time using high-speed machine-vision cameras) it gave the flies the illusion of flying freely in the world. This gave researchers the ability to train and test flies for conditioning tasks by allowing the insect to orient away from an image associated with the negative heat stimulus and towards a second image not associated with heat.

They tested two variants of conditioning, one in which flies were given visual stimulation overlapping in time with the heat (delay conditioning), both ending together, or a second, trace conditioning, by waiting 5 to 20 seconds to deliver the heat after showing and removing the visual stimulation. The intervening time is considered the “trace” interval during which the fly retains a “trace” of the visual stimulus in its brain, a feature indicative of attention, working memory and conscious awareness in mammals.

The researchers also imaged the brain to track calcium activity in real-time using a fluorescent molecule they genetically engineered into their brain cells. This allowed the researchers to record the formation and duration of the fly’s living memory since they saw the trace blinking on and off while being held in the fly’s short-term (working) memory. They also found that a distraction introduced during training — a gentle puff of air — made the visual memory fade more quickly, marking the first time researchers have been able to prove such distractedness in flies and implicating an attentional requirement in memory formation in Drosophila.

“This work demonstrates not only that flies are capable of this higher form of trace conditioning, and that the learning is distractible just like in mammals and humans, but the neural activity underlying these attentional and working memory processes in the fly show remarkable similarity to those in mammals,” said Dhruv Grover, a UC San Diego KIBM research faculty member and lead author of the new study. “This work demonstrates that fruit flies could serve as a powerful model for the study of higher cognitive functions. Simply put, the fly continues to amaze in how smart it really is.”

The scientists also identified the area of the fly’s brain where the memory formed and faded — an area known as the ellipsoid body of the fly’s central complex, a location that corresponds to the cerebral cortex in the human brain.

Further, the research team discovered that the neurochemical dopamine is required for such learning and higher cognitive functions. The data revealed that dopamine reactions increasingly occurred earlier in the learning process, eventually anticipating the coming heat stimulus.

The researchers are now investigating details of how attention is physiologically encoded in the brain. Grover believes the lessons learned from this model system are likely to directly inform our understanding of human cognition strategies and neural disorders that disrupt them, but also contribute to new engineering approaches that lead to performance breakthroughs in artificial intelligence designs.

The coauthors of the study include Dhruv Grover, Jen-Yung Chen, Jiayun Xie, Jinfang Li, Jean-Pierre Changeux and Ralph Greenspan (all affiliated with the UC San Diego Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind, and J.-P. Changeux also a member of the Collège de France).



Journal Reference:

  1. Dhruv Grover, Jen-Yung Chen, Jiayun Xie, Jinfang Li, Jean-Pierre Changeux, Ralph J. Greenspan. Differential mechanisms underlie trace and delay conditioning in Drosophila. Nature, 2022; DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04433-6

Americans’ Trust in Scientists, Other Groups Declines (Pew Research Center)

pewresearch.org

Republicans’ confidence in medical scientists down sharply since early in the coronavirus outbreak

By Brian Kennedy, Alec Tyson and Cary Funk

February 15, 2022


How we did this

Pew Research Center conducted this study to understand how much confidence Americans have in groups and institutions in society, including scientists and medical scientists. We surveyed 14,497 U.S. adults from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12, 2021.

The survey was conducted on Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP) and included an oversample of Black and Hispanic adults from the Ipsos KnowledgePanel. A total of 3,042 Black adults (single-race, not Hispanic) and 3,716 Hispanic adults were sampled.

Respondents on both panels are recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses. This way nearly all U.S. adults have a chance of selection. The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other categories. Read more about the ATP’s methodology.

Here are the questions used for this report, along with responses, and its methodology.

This is made possible by The Pew Charitable Trusts, which received support from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF, an advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation.


Pew Research Center conducted this study to understand how much confidence Americans have in groups and institutions in society, including scientists and medical scientists. We surveyed 14,497 U.S. adults from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12, 2021.

The survey was conducted on Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP) and included an oversample of Black and Hispanic adults from the Ipsos KnowledgePanel. A total of 3,042 Black adults (single-race, not Hispanic) and 3,716 Hispanic adults were sampled.

Respondents on both panels are recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses. This way nearly all U.S. adults have a chance of selection. The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other categories. Read more about the ATP’s methodology.

Here are the questions used for this report, along with responses, and its methodology.

This is made possible by The Pew Charitable Trusts, which received support from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF, an advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation.

Americans’ confidence in groups and institutions has turned downward compared with just a year ago. Trust in scientists and medical scientists, once seemingly buoyed by their central role in addressing the coronavirus outbreak, is now below pre-pandemic levels.

Chart shows public confidence in scientists and medical scientists has declined over the last year

Overall, 29% of U.S. adults say they have a great deal of confidence in medical scientists to act in the best interests of the public, down from 40% who said this in November 2020. Similarly, the share with a great deal of confidence in scientists to act in the public’s best interests is down by 10 percentage points (from 39% to 29%), according to a new Pew Research Center survey.

The new findings represent a shift in the recent trajectory of attitudes toward medical scientists and scientists. Public confidence in both groups had increased shortly after the start of the coronavirus outbreak, according to an April 2020 survey. Current ratings of medical scientists and scientists have now fallen below where they were in January 2019, before the emergence of the coronavirus.

Scientists and medical scientists are not the only groups and institutions to see their confidence ratings decline in the last year. The share of Americans who say they have a great deal of confidence in the military to act in the public’s best interests has fallen 14 points, from 39% in November 2020 to 25% in the current survey. And the shares of Americans with a great deal of confidence in K-12 public school principals and police officers have also decreased (by 7 and 6 points, respectively).

Large majorities of Americans continue to have at least a fair amount of confidence in medical scientists (78%) and scientists (77%) to act in the public’s best interests. These ratings place them at the top of the list of nine groups and institutions included in the survey. A large majority of Americans (74%) also express at least a fair amount of confidence in the military to act in the public’s best interests. Roughly two-thirds say this about police officers (69%) and K-12 public school principals (64%), while 55% have at least a fair amount of confidence in religious leaders.

The public continues to express lower levels of confidence in journalists, business leaders and elected officials, though even for these groups, public confidence is tilting more negative. Four-in-ten say they have a great deal or a fair amount of confidence in journalists and business leaders to act in the public’s best interests; six-in-ten now say they have not too much or no confidence at all in these groups. Ratings for elected officials are especially negative: 24% say they have a great deal or fair amount of confidence in elected officials, compared with 76% who say they have not too much or no confidence in them.

The survey was fielded Nov. 30 through Dec. 12, 2021, among 14,497 U.S. adults, as the omicron variant of the coronavirus was first detected in the United States – nearly two years since the coronavirus outbreak took hold. Recent surveys this year have found declining ratings for how President Joe Biden has handled the coronavirus outbreak as well as lower ratings for his job performance – and that of Congress – generally.

Partisan differences over trust in medical scientists, scientists continue to widen since the coronavirus outbreak

Democrats remain more likely than Republicans to express confidence in medical scientists and scientists to act in the public’s best interests.

Chart shows Democrats remain more confident than Republicans in medical scientists; ratings fall among both groups

However, there has been a significant decline in public confidence in medical scientists and scientists among both partisan groups.

Among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, nine-in-ten express either a great deal (44%) or a fair amount (46%) of confidence in medical scientists to act in the public’s best interests. However, the share expressing strong confidence in medical scientists has fallen 10 points since November 2020.

There has been a similar decline in the share of Democrats holding the strongest level of confidence in scientists since November 2020. (Half of the survey respondents were asked about their confidence in “medical scientists,” while the other half were asked about “scientists.”)

Still, ratings for medical scientists, along with those for scientists, remain more positive than those for other groups in the eyes of Democrats and independents who lean to the Democratic Party. None of the other groups rated on the survey garner as much confidence; the closest contenders are public school principals and the military. About three-quarters (76%) of Democrats and Democratic leaners have at least a fair amount of confidence in public school principals; 68% say the same about the military.

There has been a steady decline in confidence in medical scientists among Republicans and Republican leaners since April 2020. In the latest survey, just 15% have a great deal of confidence in medical scientists, down from 31% who said this in April 2020 and 26% who said this in November 2020. There has been a parallel increase in the share of Republicans holding negative views of medical scientists, with 34% now saying they have not too much or no confidence at all in medical scientists to act in the public’s best interests – nearly three times higher than in January 2019, before the coronavirus outbreak.

Republicans’ views of scientists have followed a similar trajectory. Just 13% have a great deal of confidence in scientists, down from a high of 27% in January 2019 and April 2020. The share with negative views has doubled over this time period; 36% say they have not too much or no confidence at all in scientists in the latest survey.

Republicans’ confidence in other groups and institutions has also declined since the pandemic took hold. The share of Republicans with at least a fair amount of confidence in public school principals is down 27 points since April 2020. Views of elected officials, already at low levels, declined further; 15% of Republicans have at least a fair amount of confidence in elected officials to act in the public’s best interests, down from 37% in April 2020.

Race and ethnicity, education, partisan affiliation each shape confidence in medical scientists

People’s assessments of scientists and medical scientists are tied to several factors, including race and ethnicity as well as levels of education and partisan affiliation.

Chart shows confidence in medical scientists declines among White, Black and Hispanic adults since April 2020

Looking across racial and ethnic groups, confidence in medical scientists declined at least modestly among White and Black adults over the past year. The decline was especially pronounced among White adults.

There is now little difference between how White, Black and Hispanic adults see medical scientists. This marks a shift from previous Pew Research Center surveys, where White adults were more likely than Black adults to express high levels of confidence in medical scientists.

Among White adults, the share with a great deal of confidence in medical scientists to act in the best interests of the public has declined from 43% to 29% over the past year. Ratings are now lower than they were in January 2019, before the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S.

Among Black adults, 28% say they have a great deal of confidence in medical scientists to act in the public’s best interests, down slightly from November 2020 (33%).

The share of Hispanic adults with a strong level of trust in medical scientists is similar to the share who expressed the same level of trust in November 2020, although the current share is 16 points lower than it was in April 2020 (29% vs 45%), shortly after measures to address the coronavirus outbreak began. Ratings of medical scientists among Hispanic adults continue to be lower than they were before the coronavirus outbreak. In January 2019, 37% of Hispanic adults said they had a great deal of confidence in medical scientists.

While the shares of White, Black and Hispanic adults who express a great deal of confidence in medical scientists have declined since the early stages of the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S., majorities of these groups continue to express at least a fair amount of confidence in medical scientists, and the ratings for medical scientists compare favorably with those of other groups and institutions rated in the survey.

Chart shows White Democrats express higher levels of confidence in medical scientists than Black, Hispanic Democrats

Confidence in scientists tends to track closely with confidence in medical scientists. Majorities of White, Black and Hispanic adults have at least a fair amount of confidence in scientists. And the shares with this view continue to rank at or above those for other groups and institutions. For more on confidence in scientists over time among White, Black and Hispanic adults, see the Appendix.

Confidence in medical scientists and scientists across racial and ethnic groups plays out differently for Democrats and Republicans.

White Democrats (52%) are more likely than Hispanic (36%) and Black (30%) Democrats to say they have a great deal of confidence in medical scientists to act in the public’s best interests. However, large majorities of all three groups say they have at least a fair amount of confidence in medical scientists.

Among Republicans and Republican leaners, 14% of White adults say they have a great deal of confidence in medical scientists, while 52% say they have a fair amount of confidence. Views among Hispanic Republicans are very similar to those of White Republicans, in contrast to differences seen among Democrats.

There are similar patterns in confidence in scientists. (However, the sample size for Black Republicans in the survey is too small to analyze on these measures.) See the Appendix for more.

Americans with higher levels of education express more positive views of scientists and medical scientists than those with lower levels of education, as has also been the case in past Center surveys. But education matters more in assessments by Democrats than Republicans.

Chart shows college-educated Democrats express high levels of confidence in medical scientists

Democrats and Democratic leaners with at least a college degree express a high level of confidence in medical scientists: 54% have a great deal of confidence and 95% have at least a fair amount of confidence in medical scientists to act in the public’s interests. By comparison, a smaller share of Democrats who have not graduated from college have confidence in medical scientists.

Among Republicans and Republican leaners, college graduates are 9 points more likely than those with some college experience or less education to express a great deal of confidence in medical scientists (21% vs. 12%).

There is a similar difference between those with higher and lower education levels among Democrats when it comes to confidence in scientists. Among Republicans, differences by education are less pronounced; there is no significant difference by education level in the shares holding the strongest level of confidence in scientists to act in the public’s interests. See the Appendix for details.

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Ressignificação da Semana de Arte Moderna incorpora aspectos da cultura negra (Pesquisa Fapesp)

José Tadeu Arantes | 18 de fevereiro de 2022

Agência FAPESP – O esforço de reinterpretação de um passado imaginário, cheio de silêncios e ausências, por um presente que também não está livre de ambiguidades, mas no qual certos ocultamentos começam a ser desvelados: este foi, em certa medida, o fio condutor da mesa “Escritas, arquivos e ressignificações”, que deu sequência à série de encontros on-line “100 Anos da Semana de Arte Moderna: Pesquisa, Arte e Literatura”, promovida pela FAPESP.

Em mesa-redonda que integra a série 100 Anos da Semana de Arte Moderna: Pesquisa, Arte e Literatura, especialistas promovem uma espécie de “desbranqueamento” do evento que inaugurou um novo tempo na cultura brasileira (Mário de Andrade; foto: Wikimedia Commons)

“A Semana de Arte Moderna tornou-se um capital simbólico importante, especialmente agora”, disse o primeiro participante da mesa, Pedro Meira Monteiro, professor na Princeton University, nos Estados Unidos.

Monteiro lembrou que as comemorações da Semana sempre foram marcadas pela controvérsia. E destacou a “guerra de narrativas do cinquentenário”, quando, em plena ditadura, em 1972, houve uma tentativa de normalizar o legado da Semana com uma exposição oficial no Museu de Arte de São Paulo (Masp). Na margem oposta do espectro político, não havia muito tempo que o Rei da Vela, de Oswald de Andrade (1890-1954), tinha sido montado por José Celso Martinez Corrêa, no Teatro Oficina, em São Paulo; que Macunaíma, de Mário de Andrade (1893-1945), virara filme, sob a direção de Joaquim Pedro de Andrade; que os poetas concretistas haviam redescoberto Oswald; e que o enorme acervo de Mário fora transferido para o Instituto de Estudos Brasileiros da Universidade de São Paulo (IEB-USP).

“A Semana era puxada para todos os lados. Aliás, desde o seu início, a Semana serviu às direitas e às esquerdas, como uma espécie de butim de uma guerra imaginária”, resumiu.

Segundo Monteiro, a melhor leitura da Semana atualmente é a do rapper Emicida, nome artístico do compositor, cantor e multiartista Leandro Roque de Oliveira (nascido em 1985), em seu filme AmarElo – É Tudo Pra Ontem (2020). “Emicida promove uma espécie de hermenêutica urbanística, lembrando do passado negro que marca o centro de São Paulo – uma cidade que é vista como centro nervoso da imigração europeia, o que já é signo de um apagamento importante. E somos levados pela imaginação do Teatro Municipal à estação São Bento do Metrô, que funciona como um canal subterrâneo, imaginário e real, que conecta às periferias, onde as luzinhas das quebradas se confundem com as estrelas. Estação São Bento, que é uma espécie de buraco mágico de Alice, onde se entra e sai em direção a um determinado universo que o discurso hegemônico prefere apagar, que é a São Paulo negra, dos pretos e das pretas”, afirmou.

Essa linha crítica, que opera uma espécie de “desbranqueamento” da Semana de Arte Moderna, também foi seguida por Lígia Fonseca Ferreira, professora na Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp).

Especialista na vida e na obra do escritor e abolicionista Luiz Gama (1830-1882), Ferreira falou, entre outros tópicos, de textos que permaneceram por muito tempo inéditos e da enorme correspondência de Mário de Andrade, que foram temas de sua pesquisa de pós-doutorado e continuam a ser estudados por ela e por estudantes sob sua orientação. Nesse conjunto, destacou a figura de “Mário de Andrade, africanista”, título do capítulo que escreveu para o livro Mário de Andrade: aspectos do folclore brasileiro (Global Editora), organizado por Telê Ancona Lopez, com estabelecimento do texto, apresentação e notas de Angela Teodoro Grillo.

Ferreira começou sua apresentação lendo e comentando trechos de um discurso escrito por Mário de Andrade para a cerimônia de encerramento das comemorações do cinquentenário da Abolição da Escravidão, em 1938. O escritor modernista era, então, diretor do Departamento de Cultura do Município de São Paulo e se dedicou com total afinco aos preparativos da celebração. Mas não pôde ler seu discurso porque foi exonerado – ou, como ele mesmo disse, “jogado fora” – do departamento pouco tempo antes, em consequência do cerceamento das liberdades democráticas provocado pela instalação, por Getúlio Vargas, da ditatura do Estado Novo. “O texto permaneceu inédito até poucos anos atrás”, informou Ferreira.

E leu um trecho, no qual Mário de Andrade afirmava que o Departamento de Cultura fizera questão de “trazer os negros para esta sala de brancos”, referindo-se especialmente ao convite feito ao doutor Francisco Lucrécio (1909-2001), um dos fundadores da Frente Negra Brasileira (FNB), para participar da conferência comemorativa que deveria ter ocorrido no Teatro Municipal de São Paulo.

Ferreira enfatizou que o estudo dos inéditos e, principalmente, da correspondência trocada pelos intelectuais, com o rigor metodológico com que começou a ser feito no século 21, vai banindo ficções, fazendo correções biográficas e trazendo informações que permaneceram ocultas. “Essas correspondências acabam constituindo redes entre si”, ressaltou.

Entre vários exemplos, a pesquisadora mencionou a correspondência de Mário de Andrade com Roger Bastide (1898-1974), um dos principais integrantes da famosa “missão francesa”, contratada no final dos anos 1930 para dar estofo à recém-criada Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Bastide ocupou a cátedra de sociologia e tornou-se um nome referencial no estudo das religiões afro-brasileiras, vindo, inclusive, a ser iniciado no candomblé na Bahia. “Mal chegou ao Brasil, em 1938, ele escreveu a Mário de Andrade, agradecendo os livros que este lhe enviara, e dizendo: ‘eles serão para mim o guia mais seguro para penetrar nas profundezas da alma negra, pois quase sempre a intuição do poeta vai mais longe do que a atenção do cientista’”, citou Ferreira.

Para além de sua enorme simpatia por todo tipo de manifestação cultural, a ênfase dada por Mário de Andrade à cultura negra talvez atendesse também a uma motivação mais íntima, pois, no contexto de uma sociedade de hegemonia branca e racista, seu fenótipo exibia traços de ascendência africana. Traços que ele procurou ocultar, sem negar completamente. Assim como procurou ocultar, sem negar completamente, sua polimórfica sexualidade.

Esses elementos biográficos, antes camuflados nos retratos oficiais e empurrados para o campo da insinuação ou da maledicência, só em anos mais recentes passaram a ser tratados com maior franqueza, em um processo ainda penoso e controverso, mas bastante promissor, de ressignificação.

Fervilhante rede de sociabilidade

Nesse processo, que diz respeito não apenas à figura de Mário de Andrade, mas que abarca todo o chamado modernismo e muito mais, a recuperação, a conservação e o estudo crítico da correspondência, das cartas trocadas pelos protagonistas, adquirem especial importância. E esse foi exatamente o tópico tratado com maior profundidade na terceira e última apresentação da mesa, feita por Marcos Antonio de Moraes, pesquisador e docente do IEB-USP.

Em uma exposição intitulada “Modernismo e Epistolografia”, Moraes falou da centralidade das correspondências no movimento modernista brasileiro. E citou a respeito um trecho interessantíssimo de uma crônica de Mário de Andrade: “Eu sempre afirmo que a literatura brasileira só principiou escrevendo realmente cartas com o movimento modernista. Antes, com alguma rara exceção, os escritores brasileiros só faziam estilo epistolar. Mas cartas com assunto, falando mal dos outros, xingando, contando coisas, dizendo palavrões, discutindo problemas estéticos e sociais, cartas de pijama, só mesmo com o modernismo as cartas se tornaram uma forma espiritual de vida em nossa literatura”.

Com essa formulação, segundo Moraes, “Mário aponta para a configuração de uma vigorosa, abrangente, fervilhante rede de sociabilidade”. E acrescentou que o autor de Pauliceia Desvairada parecia não ter dúvidas de que esse material, que circulava em sigilo, viria a ser, algum dia, amplamente conhecido.

Em um levantamento bastante exaustivo, Moraes contabilizou até a data presente um total de 325 livros de cartas. Desse montante, 33 volumes são cartas de Mário de Andrade, sem contar as reedições. “Portanto, mais de 10% do total”, disse. Conforme o próprio Mário de Andrade o definiu, trata-se de um “gigantismo epistolar”.

O próprio Moraes organizou e publicou a correspondência entre Mário de Andrade e Manuel Bandeira, em uma coleção que já recebeu dois prêmios Jabuti. Para este ano, entre outros livros, está prevista a publicação da correspondência entre Mário de Andrade e Oswald de Andrade, sob a edição de Gênese Andrade. Bastante aguardada, essa obra talvez lance alguma luz sobre a tão comentada, mas nunca bem compreendida, briga que afastou os dois principais protagonistas da Semana de Arte Moderna.

Com moderação de Mirhiane Mendes de Abreu, professora da Unifesp, a mesa “Escritas, arquivos e ressignificações” pode ser assistida na íntegra em: www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-j-Cu0s6-k.

Este texto foi originalmente publicado por Agência FAPESP de acordo com a licença Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND. Leia o original aqui.

Opinion | Why We Are Not Facing the Prospect of a Second Civil War (New York Times)

nytimes.com


Jamelle Bouie

Feb. 15, 2022

At the Georgia State Capitol, demonstrating against the inauguration of President Biden on Jan. 20, 2021.
Credit: Joshua Rashaad McFadden for The New York Times

It has not been uncommon, in recent years, to hear Americans worry about the advent of a new civil war.

Is Civil War Ahead?” The New Yorker asked last month. “Is America heading to civil war or secession?” CNN wondered on the anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Last week, Representative Adam Kinzinger of Illinois told “The View” that “we have to recognize” the possibility of a civil war. “I don’t think it’s too far of a bridge to think that’s a possibility,” he said.

This isn’t just the media or the political class; it’s public opinion too. In a 2019 survey for the Georgetown Institute of Politics, the average respondent said that the United States was two-thirds of the way toward the “edge of a civil war.” In a recent poll conducted by the Institute of Politics at Harvard, 35 percent of voting-age Americans under 30 placed the odds of a second civil war at 50 percent or higher.

And in a result that says something about the divisions at hand, 52 percent of Trump voters and 41 percent of Biden voters said that they at least “somewhat agree” that it’s time to split the country, with either red or blue states leaving the union and forming their own country, according to a survey conducted by the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia (where I am a visiting scholar).

Several related forces are fueling this anxiety, from deepening partisan polarization and our winner-take-all politics to our sharp division across lines of identity, culture and geography. There is the fact that this country is saturated with guns, as well as the reality that many Americans fear demographic change to the point that they’re willing to do pretty much anything to stop it. There is also the issue of Donald Trump, his strongest supporters and their effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. Americans feel farther apart than at any point in recent memory, and as a result, many Americans fear the prospect of organized political violence well beyond what we saw on Jan. 6, 2021.

There is, however, a serious problem with this narrative: The Civil War we fought in the 19th century was not sparked by division qua division.

White Americans had been divided over slavery for 50 years before the crisis that led to war in 1861. The Missouri crisis of 1820, the nullification crisis of 1832, the conflict over the 1846 war with Mexico and the Compromise of 1850 all reflect the degree to which American politics rested on a sectional divide over the future of the slave system.

What made the 1850s different was the extent to which that division threatened the political economy of slavery. At the start of the decade, the historian Matthew Karp writes in “This Vast Southern Empire: Slaveholders at the Helm of American Foreign Policy,” “slaveholding power and slaveholding confidence seemed at their zenith,” the result of “spiking global demand for cotton” and the “dependence of the entire industrial world on a commodity that only American slaves could produce with profit.”

But with power came backlash. “Over the course of the decade,” Karp notes, “slavery was prohibited in the Pacific states, came under attack in Kansas and appeared unable to attach itself to any of the great open spaces of the new Southwest.” The growth of an avowedly antislavery public in the North wasn’t just a challenge to the political influence of the slaveholding South; it also threatened to undermine the slave economy itself and thus the economic basis for Southern power.

Plantation agriculture rapidly exhausted the soil. The sectional balance of Congress aside, planters needed new land to grow the cotton that secured their influence on the national (and international) stage. As Karp explains, “Slaveholders in the 1850s seldom passed up an opportunity to sketch the inexorable syllogism of King Cotton: The American South produced nearly all the world’s usable raw cotton; this cotton fueled the industrial development of the North Atlantic; therefore, the advanced economies of France, the northern United States and Great Britain were ruled, in effect, by Southern planters.” The backlash to slavery — the effort to restrain its growth and contain its spread — was an existential threat to the Southern elite.

It was the realization of that threat with the election of Abraham Lincoln — whose Republican Party was founded to stop the spread of slavery and who inherited a federal state with the power to do so — that pushed Southern elites to gamble their future on secession. They would leave the union and attempt to forge a slave empire on their own.

The point of this compact history, with regard to the present, is that it is irresponsible to talk about civil war as a function of polarization or division or rival ideologies. If those things matter, and they do, it is in how they both reflect and shape the objective interests of the people and factions in dispute.

Which is to say that if you’re worried about a second Civil War, the question to ask isn’t whether people hate each other — they always have, and we tend to grossly exaggerate the extent of this country’s political and cultural unity over time — but whether that hate results from the irreconcilable social and economic interests of opposing groups within the society. If it must be one way or the other, then you might have a conflict on your hands.

That’s where America was with slavery. That’s why our actual Civil War has been called the impending crisis. I’m not sure there’s anything in American society right now that plays the same role that the conflict over slavery did. Whatever our current challenges, whatever our current divisions, I do not think the United States is where it was in 1860. We have enough problems ahead of us already without having to worry about war breaking out here.

‘You Need a Yes on All of Those Levels’ — Experts Discuss the Future of Ocean-Based Carbon Removal Research (NASEM)

Feature Story | February 11, 2022

By Megan Lowry

Imagine an ocean enabled to help solve one of society’s biggest threats: carbon dioxide. In one proposed scenario, a system of pipes and pumps would move water from the surface to the deep ocean. In another, massive seaweed farms would dot the coastlines. And in yet another, nutrients sprinkled on the ocean surface would encourage the growth of photosynthesizing plankton. Each of these are part of a set of proposed — albeit still largely theoretical — strategies to remove CO2 from the atmosphere using the ocean.

Covering 70 percent of the world’s surface, the ocean is what researchers call a natural carbon sink. Through photosynthesis, currents, and other natural processes, the ocean and its plants and marine life pull CO2 from the air, which is then eventually stored in the deepest parts of the sea. As the world seeks to meet net-zero emissions goals and avoid the worst impacts of climate change, some have proposed interventions like those described above to capture CO2.

A National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report released late last year calls for a $125 million research program to explore six different nascent ocean-based CO2 removal strategies — and to help society gain a greater understanding of their risks, benefits, and potential impacts.

But these proposals to change ocean processes are not without controversy and debate. A recent National Academies webinar explored the most pressing social questions around ocean CO2 removal.

“Messing about with the oceans” is something that always raises a strong public response, said Nick Pidgeon, professor of environmental psychology and risk and director of the Understanding Risk Research Group at Cardiff University. “They just don’t like the feel of this. It just doesn’t seem right.”

“People value the ocean. It’s often seen as a wild space,” added Holly Buck, assistant professor of environment and sustainability at the University at Buffalo and member of the committee that wrote the 2021 National Academies report. “People are concerned about it being industrialized or tampered with.”

Some of the potential risks of ocean-based CO2 removal identified in the National Academies report include unintended environmental effects — for example, mass seaweed farming could trigger unpredictable and unwanted changes to local ecosystems, and artificial upwelling and downwelling of water could change ocean surface temperatures. There’s also risk in these strategies failing to work after investing time and resources, risk in scaling them to the level needed to significantly impact atmospheric CO2, and the risk that any efficacy they could have won’t last. 

One particular point of contention is the worry that developing the ability to remove carbon from the atmosphere on a mass scale might slow progress in reducing carbon emissions in the first place. “There’s opposition to carbon removal generally … because people are concerned that it might delay or deter mitigation,” said Pidgeon.

Ocean-based CO2 removal approaches explored in the National Academies’ report

Ocean-based CO2 removal approaches explored in the National Academies’ report


“It’s absolutely clear that in order to meet our targets, we are likely to need some form of carbon removal.”


But even with significant reductions to carbon emissions, “it’s absolutely clear that in order to meet our targets, we are likely to need some form of carbon removal,” said Pidgeon.

“There may be a point in time where the harm from climate change may outweigh those risks [of ocean-based carbon removal],” added Buck. “It’s very hard to say anything about that, given our low level of information.”

Research recommended by the National Academies report could shed more light on these risks and trade-offs, and enable more informed decision-making in climate policy. Buck emphasized that now is the time for researchers to be creating this knowledge: “We should be finding this out sooner rather than later.”

Buck said that it’s important for the public to be involved in any research that moves forward. Pidgeon agreed. “You have to engage them very early,” he said. “That’s one of the lessons that have been learned from other technologies … that have encountered extreme opposition. If you don’t bring people in early, they’re likely to find out at the wrong time and get very frustrated.”

To incorporate community views and ethical considerations into their work, Pidgeon said researchers can look to parallel scientific issues in which there is public contention and debate, such as nuclear waste disposal or human health. 

“A good example might be human embryo technology,” said Pidgeon. “In the U.K., we have a panel of ethicists and lay citizens and others who are given these particular conundrums to wrestle with, when the scientists come up with research proposals in potentially controversial areas.” He added, “We need to learn from some of those other experiences if we are to take forward this technology.”


Keeping the public involved in research also means “you may identify ways in which the science has to change.”


Bringing non-scientists into the research can also help illuminate which aspects of ocean-based carbon removal are truly relevant and most important to a community. “As scientists, we tend to think about an issue in a certain way,” said Pidgeon. “And that may not relate to what really matters to someone in a coastal community.” Keeping the public involved in research also means “you may identify ways in which the science has to change.”

Given the urgent and immediate impacts of climate change being felt around the world, one attendee asked if scientists truly have time for careful research that includes the public. Buck replied, “We do, and there’s huge risks to not doing it, because we want to set up a system that’s going to work.”

“You need a yes on all of those levels,” said Pidgeon. “You need your ethics board to say yes. You need the general conversation at the citizen level to say yes. And you need the local community’s consent as well.”

Ethnobotanist Mark Plotkin: Indigenous knowledge serves as a ‘connective tissue’ between nature and human well-being (Mongabay)

news.mongabay.com

by Rhett A. Butler on 31 January 2022


  • As a best-selling author, the co-founder of the award-winning Amazon Conservation Team, and an acclaimed public speaker, Mark Plotkin is one of the world’s most prominent rainforest ethnobotanists and conservationists.
  • His experiences in Amazonian communities led Plotkin, along with Costa Rican conservationist Liliana Madrigal, to establish the Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) in 1995. ACT took a distinctly different approach than most Western conservation groups at the time: It placed Indigenous communities at the center of its strategy.
  • ACT’s approach has since been widely adopted by other organizations, and its philosophy as a whole is now more relevant than ever as the conservation sector wrestles with its colonial roots.
  • Plotkin spoke of his work, trends in conservation, and a range of other topics in a January 2022 interview with Mongabay founder Rhett A. Butler.

As a best-selling author, the co-founder of the award-winning Amazon Conservation Team, and an acclaimed public speaker, Mark Plotkin is one of the world’s most prominent rainforest ethnobotanists and conservationists. Plotkin has worked closely with Indigenous communities–including traditional healers or shamans–since the 1980s, first as an academic, then as a member of a large conservation organization.

His experiences in Amazonian communities led Plotkin, along with Costa Rican conservationist Liliana Madrigal, to establish the Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) in 1995. ACT took a distinctly different approach than most Western conservation groups at the time: It placed Indigenous communities at the center of its strategy, working in deep and sustained partnerships with Indigenous elders and leaders to strengthen recognition of their rights through a combination of traditional knowledge and mapping technologies. These efforts have resulted in vast swathes of Indigenous territories across rainforests in Colombia, Suriname, and Brazil securing better protection, both functionally and legally. They have also helped elevate the public’s consciousness about the value and importance of traditional Indigenous knowledge.

Mark Plotkin with Captain Kapai (middle) and Captain Aretina, members of the Tiriyo tribe.
Mark Plotkin with Captain Kapai (middle) and Captain Aretina, members of the Tiriyo tribe.

ACT’s approach has since been widely adopted by other organizations, and its philosophy as a whole is now more relevant than ever as the conservation sector wrestles with its colonial roots and the associated issues around discrimination, inclusion, and representation. Put another way, ACT’s longtime model has gone from being seen as fringe to being mainstream.

Plotkin welcomes these developments, but cautions that it will take more than lip-service and money to drive meaningful shifts in how conservation groups work with Indigenous communities.

“Claiming you are going to do something difficult and then carrying it out successfully are not the same thing,” Plotkin told Mongabay during a January 2022 interview. “In my experience, partnering effectively with tribal colleagues and communities does not happen on a western timeline and is certainly not expedited by simply throwing lots of money at the process.”

Jonathan, head of the indigenous park guard program for Kwamalasamutu, on patrol in the Amazon rainforest.
An Indigenous park guard on patrol near Kwamalasamutu, Suriname in the Amazon rainforest. Photo credit: Rhett A. Butler

Plotkin has been working to broaden public interest in Indigenous cultures and knowledge through a variety of platforms, from books to speeches to films, as a way to create a stronger constituency for Indigenous-led conservation. Last year he launched a podcast, “Plants of the Gods: Hallucinogens, Healing, Culture and Conservation”, to reach new audiences with this message.

Plotkin says that the podcast’s emphasis on medicinal plants, especially hallucinogenic plants, serves a purpose.

“I believe that hallucinogens and shamanism represent some of the most important ‘connective tissue’ between tropical nature and human well-being,” Plotkin told Mongabay.

Mark Plotkin podcasting. Photo credit: Mark Plotkin
Mark Plotkin podcasting. Photo credit: Mark Plotkin

As with his books, Plotkin leverages his storytelling abilities to engage his audience. These skills, he says, are critical to maximizing your effectiveness, whether that’s as a conservationist or something else.

“I have spent much of my career working with Indigenous peoples where… storytelling represents an essential craft,” he said. 

“Our industrialized society and our educational system have long undervalued the importance of telling an effective story. Whether you are a prosecutor trying to convince a jury, or a fundraiser trying to convince a donor, or a conservationist trying to convince a government official, you must be able to convey the information in a clear and compelling manner.”

Plotkin spoke of his work, trends in conservation, and a range of other topics in a January 2022 exchange with Mongabay founder Rhett A. Butler.

Mark Plotkin conversing with Yaloeefuh, a Trio shaman. Plotkin has worked with  Yaloeefuh since 1984. Image credit: Amazon Conservation Team
Mark Plotkin conversing with Yaloeefuh, a Trio shaman. Plotkin has worked with Yaloeefuh since 1984. Image credit: Amazon Conservation Team

AN INTERVIEW WITH MARK PLOTKIN

Mongabay: You launched a very popular podcast last year. As a biologist and a successful author, what moved you to start podcasting?

Mark Plotkin: When I was a kid, there were only three channels of television, meaning an important message that appeared on any one of these channels would be seen by tens of millions of people. Such is no longer the case. If you want to disseminate a message widely, you have to work in a variety of media. I launched “Plants of the Gods: Hallucinogens, Healing, Culture and Conservation” with the intent of reaching a new and broad audience beyond just the folks who visit the Amazon Conservation Team website or have read my books.

Mongabay: Why the focus on hallucinogens and shamanism?

Mark Plotkin: First and foremost, because I am an ethnobotanist, and these are topics that I have found endlessly fascinating since I first wandered into a night school class taught my mentor Richard Schultes, the so-called “Father of Ethnobotany,” in September of 1974.

Secondly, because I believe that hallucinogens and shamanism represent some of the most important “connective tissue” between tropical nature and human well-being.

Mark Plotkin with Akoi, Sikiyana medicine man. Photo credit: ACT
Mark Plotkin with Akoi, Sikiyana medicine man. Photo credit: ACT

Thirdly, because of timing: Every week brings more news about how tropical hallucinogens like psilocybin and ayahuasca (both covered in episodes of “Plants of the Gods”) offer new hope in the treatment—and, sometimes, the cure—of intractable mental ailments ranging from depression to addiction.

Mongabay: Is this why ayahuasca tourism seems so out of control in places like Peru?

Mark Plotkin: This question brings to mind more than one cliché: “It is the best of times; it is the worst of times.” “When God wants to punish you, she answers your prayers.” “When it rains, it pours.”

Look, every biologist as far back as Linnaeus noted the expertise of Indigenous peoples regarding use of local flora and fauna. And most ethnobiologists as far back as Schultes in the late 1930s observed that these cultures used these species to heal in ways we could not understand, that – in the cases of hallucinogenic plants and fungi – shamans were employing psychoactive plants and fungi as biological scalpels to diagnose, analyze, treat and sometimes cure ailments that our own physicians or psychiatrists could not.

It therefore comes as no surprise that people whose medical, spiritual and/or emotional needs are not being met by western medicine or organized religion are traveling to places like Iquitos in the Peruvian Amazon to be treated by “indigenous shamans” – some of whom are not Indigenous and many of whom are not shamans.

Sunrise over the Amazon rainforest
Sunrise over the Amazon rainforest. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

The combination of remote areas, linguistic challenges, emotionally unstable people, altered states and money is a combustible one, and resulted in many problems and some fatalities. In my pal Michael Pollan’s book, “How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence,” he makes a compelling case as to how and why emotionally fragile people are the ones most at risk in these ceremonies purchased via websites.

Of course, there is a win-win scenario here in which shamanism remains an honored profession, Indigenous people are compensated fairly for their healing knowledge and practices, the rainforest is better protected and cherished, and sick people are cured. Yet achieving these goals have proven more difficult than many had anticipated.

Mongabay: Which brings to mind my next question: The Amazon Conservation Team has put Indigenous communities at the center of its work since inception. Now the conservation sector as a whole is putting much more emphasis on the role Indigenous peoples play in achieving conservation and climate objectives. In your view, what has driven this shift?

Mark Plotkin: It is all too easy to say that the only news that is coming out of the environment in general – and the rainforest in particular – is bad. That people in general and large conservation organizations are now realizing the central role local societies must be empowered to assume is highly encouraging. That the Indigenous peoples themselves are pointing out that they are the best stewards of their ancestral ecosystems is likewise long overdue and to be celebrated.

Nonetheless, claiming you are going to do something difficult and then carrying it out successfully are not the same thing. In my experience, partnering effectively with tribal colleagues and communities does not happen on a western timeline and is certainly not expedited by simply throwing lots of money at the process. For example, for almost four decades, I have been working with the great shaman Amasina – who has been interviewed by Mongabay – and he is still showing me new treatments. Trying to learn information like this in a hurry would have failed.

Amasina in 1982. Photo credit: Mark Plotkin.
Amasina in 1982. Photo credit: Mark Plotkin.
Mark Plotkin with Amasina in Suriname. Photo credit: ACT
Mark Plotkin with Amasina in Suriname. Photo credit: ACT

Another personal example: about five years ago, I was invited (as an observer) to attend a gathering of Indigenous leaders in northeastern Brazil. On the first afternoon, I was approached by Captain Aretina of the Tiriyo people. He said, “I have not seen you in over 30 years. You were my father’s friend. When I heard you were going to be here, I traveled five days from my village to attend. May I give you a hug?” And we embraced, warmly and tearfully.

You cannot create this type of bond when you land at a small rainforest airstrip, tell the pilot to wait for you, have a brief meeting with the village chief, offer him lots of money and then get back on the plane and fly off.

Mongabay: The Amazon Conservation Team’s work in Colombia has significantly expanded over the past decade. What is the impact you’re most proud about in Colombia?

Mark Plotkin: The Amazon Conservation Team just celebrated its 25th Anniversary and Colombia was our first program and remains our largest. The accomplishments there are legion: Gaining title to more than two million acres (an area larger than Yellowstone) for the Indigenous peoples themselves, creation of the first Indigenous women’s reserve (“Mamakunapa”) in the northwest Amazon (with the assistance of my friend Tim Ferriss), and helping craft and pass legislation to protect uncontacted tribes and their ancestral rainforests.

One of the most meaningful achievements for me personally involves the expansion of Chiribiquete National Park where Schultes worked and collected. So stunned was he by this spectacular landscape after he first visited in 1943 that he began lobbying to have the region declared a protected area as soon as he returned to the capital city of Bogotá. In close collaboration with Colombian colleagues in both academia and government, this first came to fruition in 1989.

During the past decade, under the leadership of Northwest Amazon Program Director Carolina Gil and ACT co-founder Liliana Madrigal, we have partnered with local Colombians, (including Indigenous colleagues), to expand Chiribiquete to become the largest rainforest protect area in the Amazon (if not the world). At more than 17,000 square miles, it is twice the size of Massachusetts and protects a multitude of flora and fauna, the worlds’ largest assemblage of Indigenous painting, and at least three uncontacted tribes.

Meseta de Pyramides, Chiribiquete, Colombia. Photo credit: Mark Plotkin

Mongabay: And what about beyond Colombia?

Of course, there are other signature projects elsewhere. In the northeast Amazon, we have successfully partnered with local Indigenous peoples to help them bring no fewer than five non-timber products to market, with more in the pipeline. As far as I know, our Indigenous Ranger Program in the same region is the one of the first and longest running programs of this type in lowland South America. And our Shamans and Apprentices Program – facilitating the transfer of intragenerational healing wisdom within the tribe has been similarly effective.

And mapping: We are extremely proud of the fact that ACT – under the leadership of our ace cartographer Brian Hettler – has partnered with over 90 Indigenous groups to train them to map their own lands.

Furthermore, we have created highly innovative “Story Maps” for a variety of purposes. My two favorites are “The Life and Times of Richard Schultes” and “Lands of Freedom focusing on the oral history and history of the Matawai Maroons of Suriname, a landmark in documenting the African American diaspora.

Mongabay: Returning to the subject of Colombia, despite relatively progressive policies around Indigenous rights and conservation, Colombia’s deforestation rate has been climbing. What do you see as the key elements to reversing this trend?

Mark Plotkin: Apparently, the Presidents of both Colombia and Costa Rica were hailed as heroes at the recent COP meetings, based largely on programs and projects largely enacted by predecessors.

Tree cover loss and primary forest loss in Colombia from 2002 to 2020 according to data from Hansen et al 2021.
Tree cover loss and primary forest loss in Colombia from 2002 to 2020 according to data from Hansen et al 2021.

We need both the carrot and the stick to move forward in the sense that positive moves need to be celebrated while destructive moves are punished by economic responses, not just in the tropics but here in the industrialized world as well.

The concentration of wealth also needs to be called out: That more and more of the world’s wealth is the hands of the few, especially those few who have little connection to nature, bodes ill for the future. It is encouraging to see more billionaires writing checks for progressive causes but — with some very noteworthy exceptions — they are not giving their support to the most effective grassroots organizations, despite a lot of blather about “impact investing.”

The bottom line: We need to more effectively celebrate or criticize politicians and businesspeople for their actions. We also need to make sure much more training, opportunity and support are reaching communities at the grassroots level. And we need to do what we can to reorient our society and our economy to stop glorifying profits at all costs and promoting short-term gratification planning, thinking and operations which is fouling our global nest at an ever more frantic pace.

Mongabay: Beyond what you’ve mentioned so far, what do you see as the biggest gaps in the conservation sector? What is holding conservation back from having greater impact?

Mark Plotkin: One need is better analysis: What is the cost of pouring mercury into the Amazon in terms of human suffering and increased cancers? Of course, presenting the cost-benefit equation alone as a simple solution is far too reductionist. Throughout the course of human prehistory (e.g., the overhunting and extinction of animals as varied as the American mammoth and the Steller’s sea cow) and history (deforestation of the Mediterranean countries, DDT as a pesticide, voting against one’s economic self-interest, etc.), people have always carried out self-destructive practices.

Gold mining in the Peruvian Amazon. Photo by Rhett A. Butler.
Gold mining in the Peruvian Amazon. Photo by Rhett A. Butler.

Yet better explanation of costs and benefits, better elucidation of the spiritual components of environmental stewardship and better prosecution of environmental destroyers would bode well for the future. Many environmentalists forget: It was evangelicals who spoke in support of and fought to protect the Endangered Species Act when it was threatened in the 1980s. Better bridge-building in our ever more politically polarized world in the U.S. could conceivably bring many benefits.

Mongabay: Do you think the pandemic will teach us anything about how to do conservation better?

Mark Plotkin: I penned an editorial for the Los Angeles Review of Books, titled “Conservation and Coronavirus,” that described the link between the rise of the novel coronavirus and the abuse of nature in general and the wildlife trade in particular, and asserted that the best way to head off the next pandemic was to reset and rethink much of the unethical and needlessly cruel exploitation of Mother Nature, from deforestation to cramming animals into fetid cages. Many, many others have spoken to the same issues. Time will tell if there were lessons learned from the pandemic. In the short term, I am not seeing the changes necessary.

Mongabay: You’re the author of several acclaimed books, have appeared in numerous documentaries, and host a successful podcast. What would you tell younger colleagues about the importance of storytelling?

Mark Plotkin: I start with two advantages. First, I hail from New Orleans, where good storytelling is a highly celebrated practice. Not only is it a city where many great writers and storytellers were born, but even some of our most celebrated authors who weren’t raised there, like Twain and Faulkner, had their careers and abilities turbocharged by spending time in New Orleans. I have also spent much of the past four decades working with traditional storytellers in Indigenous cultures where being able to make a point through a tale well told is of paramount importance.

Secondly, I have spent much of my career working with Indigenous peoples where (once again) storytelling represents an essential craft.

The single best book I have every read about learning how to tell a story – whether it is while sitting around a campfire in the wilderness or composing a script for Netflix – is “The Writer’s Journey,” by Chris Vogler. The author explains Joseph Campbell’s “Hero’s Journey” through the prism of Hollywood films and explains why and how “The Wizard of Oz,” “Star Wars” and “Harry Potter” are the same basic story. Every storyteller should read this book!

Mark Plotkin with Amasina and other medicine men. Photo credit: ACT
Mark Plotkin with Amasina and other medicine men. Photo credit: ACT

Finally, I would say that our industrialized society and our educational system have long undervalued the importance of telling an effective story. Whether you are a prosecutor trying to convince a jury, or a fundraiser trying to convince a donor, or a conservationist trying to convince a government official, you must be able to convey the information in a clear and compelling manner.

Mongabay: What advice would you give to a young person considering a career in conservation?

Mark Plotkin: It is very easy for everyone – not just young people – to be discouraged by the global environmental situation: deforestation, wildfires, pollution, climate change, etc. – the list is long and seemingly endless. However, nothing is worse than doing nothing because you can’t do everything.

Monumental change IS possible, although you do not often see it featured in the media. Just look at Mongabay: even with the all the heartbreaking stories, there are always accounts of new ideas, initiatives, and successes. I concluded my most recent book as follows: “When I was growing up in the 1950’s and 1960’s, people habitually threw litter out their car windows, smoked cigarettes in offices and on airplanes, shunned seatbelts and assumed the Berlin Wall would never come down. With enough changed minds come changed policies and realities.”

Rainforest creek in the Colombian Amazon. Image by Rhett A. Butler.

So to modify a much quoted aphorism: be and create the change to want to see. The shamans with whom I have had the honor and privilege to learn from for almost four decades insist on the interconnectedness of all things, be it deforestation or racism or elephant poaching or poverty or climate change. I certainly believe the world needs more ethnobotanists and other boundary walkers who can straddle different cultures and belief systems, but I also know that we need more lawyers and politicians and spiritual leaders and politicians and artists and businesspeople to join the cause. Environmental justice and stewardship are way too important to be left solely to environmentalists!

US could see a century’s worth of sea rise in just 30 years (AP)

apnews.com

By SETH BORENSTEIN

Feb. 15, 2022


A woman walks along a flooded street caused by a king tide, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019, in Miami Beach, Fla. Low-lying neighborhoods in South Florida are vulnerable to the seasonal flooding caused by king tides. While higher seas cause much more damage when storms such as hurricanes hit the coast, they are getting to the point where it doesn’t have to storm to be a problem. High tides get larger and water flows further inland and deeper even on sunny days. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

America’s coastline will see sea levels rise in the next 30 years by as much as they did in the entire 20th century, with major Eastern cities hit regularly with costly floods even on sunny days, a government report warns.

By 2050, seas lapping against the U.S. shore will be 10 to 12 inches (0.25 to 0.3 meters) higher, with parts of Louisiana and Texas projected to see waters a foot and a half (0.45 meters) higher, according to a 111-page report issued Tuesday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and six other federal agencies.

“Make no mistake: Sea level rise is upon us,” said Nicole LeBoeuf, director of NOAA’s National Ocean Service.

The projected increase is especially alarming given that in the 20th century, seas along the Atlantic coast rose at the fastest clip in 2,000 years.

LeBoeuf warned that the cost will be high, pointing out that much of the American economy and 40% of the population are along the coast.

However, the worst of the long-term sea level rise from the melting of ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland probably won’t kick in until after 2100, said ocean service oceanographer William Sweet, the report’s lead author.

Warmer water expands, and the melting ice sheets and glaciers adds more water to the worlds oceans.

The report “is the equivalent of NOAA sending a red flag up” about accelerating the rise in sea levels, said University of Wisconsin-Madison geoscientist Andrea Dutton, a specialist in sea level rise who wasn’t part of the federal report. The coastal flooding the U.S. is seeing now “will get taken to a whole new level in just a couple of decades.”

“We can see this freight train coming from more than a mile away,” Dutton said in an email. “The question is whether we continue to let houses slide into the ocean.”

Sea level rises more in some places than others because of sinking land, currents and water from ice melt. The U.S. will get slightly more sea level rise than the global average. And the greatest rise in the U.S. will be on the Gulf and East Coasts, while the West Coast and Hawaii will be hit less than average, Sweet said.

For example, between now and 2060, expect almost 25 inches (0.63 meters) of sea level rise in Galveston, Texas, and just under 2 feet (0.6 meters) in St. Petersburg, Florida, while only 9 inches (0.23 inches) in Seattle and 14 inches (0.36 meters) in Los Angeles, the report said.

While higher seas cause much more damage when storms such as hurricanes hit the coast, they are becoming a problem even on sunny days.

Cities such as Miami Beach, Florida; Annapolis, Maryland; and Norfolk, Virginia, already get a few minor “nuisance” floods a year during high tides, but those will be replaced by several “moderate” floods a year by mid-century, ones that cause property damage, the researchers said.

“It’s going to be areas that haven’t been flooding that are starting to flood,” Sweet said in an interview. “Many of our major metropolitan areas on the East Coast are going to be increasingly at risk.”

The western Gulf of Mexico coast, should get hit the most with the highest sea level rise — 16 to 18 inches (0.4 to 0.45 meters) — by 2050, the report said. And that means more than 10 moderate property-damaging sunny-day floods and one “major” high tide flood event a year.

The eastern Gulf of Mexico should expect 14 to 16 inches (0.35 to 0.4 meters) of sea level rise by 2050 and three moderate sunny-day floods a year. By mid-century, the Southeast coast should get a foot to 14 inches (0.3 to 0.35 meters) of sea level rise and four sunny-day moderate floods a year, while the Northeast coast should get 10 inches to a foot (0.25 to 0.3 meters) of sea level rise and six moderate sunny-day floods a year.

Both the Hawaiian Islands and Southwestern coast should expect 6 to 8 inches (0.15 to 0.2 meters) of sea level rise by mid-century, with the Northwest coast seeing only 4 to 6 inches (0.1 to 0.15 meters). The Pacific coastline will get more than 10 minor nuisance sunny-day floods a year but only about one moderate one a year, with Hawaii getting even less than that.

And that’s just until 2050. The report is projecting an average of about 2 feet of sea level rise in the United States — more in the East, less in the West — by the end of the century.

Forests follow unexpected—and surprisingly fast—paths to recovery (Anthropocene Magazine)

anthropocenemagazine.org

A new study found that carbon, nitrogen and soil density in cleared forests reached 90% of levels in untouched forests after 1 to 9 years. They key was leaving them alone.

By Warren Cornwall

February 16, 2022


Forests follow unexpected—and surprisingly fast—paths to recovery

A new study found that carbon, nitrogen and soil density in cleared forests reached 90% of levels in untouched forests after 1 to 9 years. They key was leaving them alone.

Jungles grow with such abandon they can obscure entire civilizations beneath roots and vines. That fertility could prove vital in the race to heal the scars of deforestation.

Tropical forests burned and cleared for farming and ranching in Central and South America and West Africa can bounce back in little more than a century, with some key features recovering in decades, according to new research.

While not a panacea for the destruction of ancient jungles across the globe, scientists say the findings suggest that if left to themselves, many of these places could regain the lush forests that are rich havens of biodiversity that also suck carbon from the atmosphere.

“These regrowing forests cover vast areas, and can contribute to local and global targets for ecosystem restoration,” said Lourens Poorter, an ecologist at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, who was part of the research.

Tropical jungles like the Amazon have been called the lungs of the planet for good reason. Fueled by abundant water, long growing seasons and fertile soils, forests ringing the planet’s equatorial middle can suck vast amounts of carbon from the atmosphere and provide a home for two-thirds of the world’s species.

But this richness has also made them a target for loggers, ranchers and farmers, ranging from small-time settlers to huge agricultural companies. Today, less than 50% of tropical rainforests are still standing.

As conservationists work to protect tropical landscapes, questions surround the fate of former forests turned into pasture and farmland. In the tropics in the Americas alone, an estimated 28% of forests are regrowing after being cleared. So a team of 90 scientists from research centers across the globe set out to see how these lands recovered.

Because such recovery can stretch for decades, the researchers sought to fast-forward through the process by simultaneously examining 77 sites at different stages of growth, including some old-growth forests. Places had been cleared and then abandoned for more than a century in some cases, and as little as a year in others. The locations covered both dry and wet forests, sprinkled across Central and South America and coastal west Africa.

At each location, the researchers measured a dozen key indicators of different kinds of ecological dynamics, including the makeup of the soil, leaf and stem size, how many plants fixed nitrogen in the soil, the total mass of all plants, the largest tree, and the diversity of plant species.

The forests followed unexpected paths to recovery. Scientists were surprised to see how quickly the soils recovered. Carbon, nitrogen and soil density reached 90% of levels in untouched forests after 1 to 9 years. Likewise, the functional composition of plants in the forests – the size of tree leaves, the density of wood in trees and presence of nitrogen-fixing trees – happened sooner than predicted, taking between 3 and 27 years to approach old-growth conditions, the researchers reported in Science.

The rapid soil recovery indicates that soil nutrients were buffered from slash-and-burn agriculture or enhanced by people as they burned foliage or planted nitrogen-fixing grasses, the scientists surmised. Most of the study plots were also not subject to high-intensity farming that can suck nutrients from the soil.

Some features of the forest flora also came back quickly. Fast-growing plants that first reclaim open ground gave way to more shade-tolerant plants relatively quickly, and plants returned by resprouting from seeds left by cleared plants.

“Nature will take care of it if we let it,” said Clemson University ecologist Saara DeWalt, who contributed data from forests in Panama that she has tracked since the 1990s. “Restoration of tropical forests should rely on natural regeneration. It’s the most efficient way to do it. It’s the most ecologically efficient. It’s the most economically efficient.”

Some kinds of recovery took much longer. The cleared areas took between 27 and 119 years for the total mass of greenery and the largest tree size to approach pristine conditions. It took 12 decades for the full panorama of species found in old-growth tropical forests to appear in re-growing forests.

Even that, however, is “notably fast” given the complexity of tropical forests, the scientists noted. The overall picture is one of resilience after farming or ranching, as long as it’s not too intensive and there is forest nearby to provide seeds. “If there’s no source for seeds, heavily degraded soils, and no way for animals to get there, that’s going to be a problem,” DeWalt said. “There will be times when planting will be necessary.”

Poorter, et. al. “Multidimensional tropical forest recovery.” Science. Dec. 9. 2021

Grupo vai investir US$ 41 mi para buscar alternativa ao neoliberalismo (Folha de S.Paulo)

www1.folha.uol.com.br

Steve Lohr

16 Fev 2022

Filantropos e acadêmicos dizem que está na hora de um novo conjunto de ideias orientar a economia

O salário da maioria dos americanos está estagnado há décadas. A desigualdade aumentou acentuadamente. A globalização e a tecnologia enriqueceram alguns, mas também provocaram a perda de empregos e o empobrecimento de comunidades.

Esses problemas, segundo muitos economistas, são em parte subprodutos de políticas governamentais e práticas corporativas moldadas por um conjunto de ideias que defendiam o livre mercado, o livre comércio e um papel de não interferência do governo na economia. Seu rótulo mais comum é o “neoliberalismo”.

Um grupo de filantropos e acadêmicos diz que está na hora de um novo conjunto de ideias orientar a economia. Para pensar em alternativas, as fundações William and Flora Hewlett e Omidyar Network anunciaram nesta quarta-feira (16) que estão investindo mais de US$ 41 milhões (R$ 212 milhões) em pesquisas econômicas e políticas com esse objetivo.

“O neoliberalismo está morto, mas não criamos um substituto“, disse Larry Kramer, presidente da Fundação Hewlett.

Os destinatários iniciais das doações para criar programas de pesquisa são a Escola Kennedy da Universidade Harvard, a Universidade Howard, a Universidade Johns Hopkins, além do MIT (Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts) e o Instituto Santa Fé.

Segundo Kramer, a Fundação Ford e a Open Society Foundations também se comprometeram a aderir à iniciativa e fazer doações ainda este ano para centros de pesquisa no exterior.

As universidades concordaram não só em fornecer um espaço para os centros de pesquisa, mas em reunir acadêmicos e estudantes de várias disciplinas, comunicar suas descobertas e arrecadar fundos para manter os programas em andamento.

A expectativa é de que outros financiadores e universidades façam o mesmo. “Nosso papel é fornecer fertilizante e água para cultivar algo diferente”, disse Kramer. “Achamos que esta é a próxima onda intelectual.”

O esforço, com amplo financiamento, se baseia na tese de que as ideias fornecem a estrutura para as políticas e os limites do debate público. A visão de mundo do livre mercado foi promovida com mais empenho nas décadas de 1960 e 1970 por um grupo de economistas da Universidade de Chicago, liderado por Milton Friedman, que ficou conhecida como Escola de Chicago.

Na década de 1980, o governo de Ronald Reagan, nos EUA, e o de Margaret Thatcher, na Grã-Bretanha, abraçaram com entusiasmo o modelo neoliberal. Foi também a mentalidade principal do governo Clinton para acordos de livre comércio e desregulamentação financeira. Isso também valeu para o governo Obama de modo geral, em áreas como comércio, resgate de bancos e fiscalização antitruste.

Não é tanto o caso do governo Biden. Jennifer Harris, que liderou o programa de economia e sociedade na Hewlett, onde começou o trabalho na nova iniciativa, juntou-se à equipe do Conselho Econômico Nacional do governo no ano passado.

Nos últimos anos, muitos economistas proeminentes questionaram a prudência de se deixar tantas realizações humanas ao sabor dos mercados. Os economistas estão pesquisando cada vez mais a desigualdade, e esse é um foco das universidades que recebem as bolsas.

“Reduzir a desigualdade deve ser uma meta do progresso econômico”, disse Dani Rodrik, economista da Escola Kennedy em Harvard e líder no projeto de reimaginação da economia. “Temos toda essa nova tecnologia, mas ela não abrange partes extensas da força de trabalho nem partes suficientes do país.”

Os beneficiários das doações são entusiastas qualificados do mercado. “Os mercados são ótimos, mas temos que superar essa noção de que ‘os mercados são autônomos, então deixe que o mercado resolva'”, disse David Autor, economista do trabalho no MIT. “Esse fatalismo é uma decisão.”

Autor é um dos líderes do programa do MIT para moldar o futuro do trabalho. “Estamos chamando isso de ‘moldagem’ porque é intervencionista”, disse ele.

O projeto do MIT pesquisará os desafios enfrentados por trabalhadores sem diploma universitário de quatro anos —quase dois terços da força de trabalho dos EUA— e medidas que podem melhorar seus empregos ou levá-los a ocupações mais bem remuneradas.

O grupo do MIT também vai explorar políticas e incentivos para orientar o desenvolvimento tecnológico de forma a aumentar a produtividade dos trabalhadores, em vez de substituí-los.

Cada um dos centros terá uma abordagem diferente. O programa de Howard examinará as desigualdades raciais e econômicas. O centro Johns Hopkins vai explorar a ascensão e disseminação do neoliberalismo e as lições aprendidas. E o Instituto Santa Fé desenvolverá novos modelos econômicos —atualizados com insights e dados da economia comportamental, estudos de inovação e a concorrência nos mercados digitais.

A Hewlett está contribuindo com US$ 35 milhões (R$ 181 milhões) em doações para as quatro universidades, e a Omidyar Network está fazendo uma de US$ 6,5 milhões (R$ 33,6 milhões) para o Santa Fe Institute.

A Fundação Hewlett, criada em 1966 por um cofundador da Hewlett-Packard e sua mulher, é uma das maiores entidades filantrópicas dos Estados Unidos. A Omidyar Network, criada em 2004 por Pierre Omidyar, fundador do eBay, e sua mulher, Pam, inclui uma fundação e um braço de investimento que apoia empreendimentos de impacto social com fins lucrativos.

Ambas as fundações são identificadas como de esquerda porque apoiam o trabalho em áreas como mudança climática, igualdade de gêneros e justiça econômica. Mas Mike Kubzansky, CEO da Omidyar Network, disse que os desafios econômicos de hoje superam as divisões partidárias.

“Acho que há um amplo consenso de que o conjunto tradicional de ideias econômicas já passou do prazo de validade”, disse.

Tradução de Luiz Roberto M. Gonçalves

Worst mega-drought since the Dark Ages hits the West (Independent)

independent.co.uk

Louise Boyle

Senior Climate Correspondent, New York

Feb. 15, 2022

A mega-drought is defined as one which lasts for 20 years or more

The current mega-drought gripping the US Southwest is the region’s driest period in 1,200 years, a new study has found.

The mega-drought – defined as one which lasts for 20 years or more – is the most severe since at least the year 800AD, due to soaring heat and low rainfall from summer 2020 until summer 2021.

According to the new study, published on Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change, the current mega-drought has exceeded one which occurred in the late 1500s.

The drought intensity was calculated using tree ring patterns, which provide insights about soil moisture levels each year over long timespans. The findings were checked against historical climate data for the area from southern Montana to northern Mexico, and the Pacific Ocean to the Rocky Mountains.

Since the start of the 21st century, the average soil moisture deficit was twice as severe as any drought of the 1900s, the researchers found, and greater than it was during even the driest parts of the most severe mega-droughts of the past 12 centuries.

Geographer Park Williams, the study’s lead author at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), said that it could take several years with high precipitation to overcome the mega-drought.

“It’s extremely unlikely that this drought can be ended in one wet year,” he said in a statement.

Mega-droughts occurred repeatedly from 800 to 1600, the researchers discovered, which led them to believe that swings between dry and wet periods were taking place in the Southwest region prior to the climate crisis.

Existing climate models have shown that the current drought would have been dry even without global heating but not to the same extent.

The climate crisis, largely caused by the burning of fossil fuels, is responsible for about 42 per cent of the soil moisture deficit since 2000.

The rise in global temperatures, being driven by heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions, increases evaporation which dries out soil and vegetation and leads to more severe droughts.

The average annual temperature of the Southwest increased 1.6F (0.9C) between 1901 and 2016, according to the latest US National Climate Assessment.

Currently 95 per cent of the West is in drought, according to the US Drought Monitor. In September 2021, Lake Powell and Lake Mead – two of the largest reservoirs in the US and both on the Colorado River – were at a combined 39 per cent capacity, down from 49 per cent the previous year. It is the lowest recorded levels since tracking began in 1906.

This summer, officials declared the first-ever shortage on the Colorado River which supplies water to 40 million people and sustain 4.5 million acres of agriculture.

In December, the states of Arizona, Nevada and California agreed to voluntarily reduce the amount of water being used from the Colorado River to prevent mandatory cutbacks in the coming years.

UCLA Professor Williams said that water conservation efforts that extend beyond times of drought will be needed to help ensure people have the water they need as drought conditions intensify due to the climate crisis.

Eradicating ‘extreme poverty’ would raise global emissions by less than 1% (Carbon Brief)

carbonbrief.org

14 February 2022 16:00


Lifting hundreds of millions of people out of “extreme poverty” – where they live on less than US$1.90 per day – would drive a global increase in emissions of less than 1%, according to new research.

The study, published in Nature Sustainability, highlights the global inequality in emissions between people in rich and poor countries. For example, it finds that the average carbon footprint of a person living in sub-Saharan Africa is 0.6 tonnes of carbon dioxide (tCO2). Meanwhile, the average US citizen produces 14.5tCO2 per year.

The authors find that the average carbon footprint in the top 1% of emitters was more than 75-times higher than that in the bottom 50%.

“The inequality is just insane,” the lead author of the study tells Carbon Brief. “If we want to reduce our carbon emissions, we really need to do something about the consumption patterns of the super-rich.”

A scientist not involved in the research says that “we often hear that actions taken in Europe or the US are meaningless when compared to the industrial emissions of China, or the effects of rapid population growth in Africa. This paper exposes these claims as wilfully ignorant, at best”.

Emissions inequality

Humans release tens of billions of tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere every year. However, the distribution of these emissions is unequal – as they are disproportionately produced by people in wealthier countries who typically live more carbon-intensive lifestyles.

The new study uses what it calls “outstandingly detailed” global expenditure data from the World Bank Consumption Dataset from 2014 to assess the carbon footprints of people in different countries, and with different consumption levels.

Dr Klaus Hubacek is a professor of science, technology and society at the University of Groningen and an author on the study. He tells Carbon Brief what is included in consumption figures:

“Driving the model with the consumption patterns calculates the carbon emissions not only directly through expenditure for heating and cooling, but the embodied carbon emissions in the products they buy. So it’s taking account of the entire global supply chains to calculate those carbon emissions.”

Dr Yuli Shan – a faculty research fellow in climate change economics at the University of Groningen – is also an author on the study. He explains that using consumption data ensures that carbon emissions are linked to the countries that use goods and services, rather than the countries that produce them. This is important, because “poor countries emit large quantities of CO2 due to the behaviour of people in developed countries”, he adds.

The map below shows the average carbon footprints of residents of the 116 countries included in the study. The shading indicates the size of the carbon footprint, for low (blue) to high (red). Note the exponential scale on the colour bar.

National average carbon footprints for 116 countries, from low (blue) to high (red). Note the exponential scale on the colour bar. Source: Bruckner et al (2022).

The authors find that Luxembourg has the highest average national per capita carbon footprint in the study, at 30tCO2 per person, followed by the US with 14.5tCO2. It is worth noting that a number of countries with high per-capita emissions are not included in the study, such as Australia, Canada, Japan, Saudi Arabia and Iran, as these are not included in the dataset.

In contrast, Madagascar, Malawi, Burkina Faso, Uganda, Ethiopia and Rwanda all have average carbon footprints of less than 0.2tCO2.

Dr Shoibal Chakravarty is a visiting professor at the Divecha Centre for Climate Change and was also not involved in the research. He tells Carbon Brief that the study “significantly improves on previous attempts” to measure per-capita emissions, and is “more rigorous that past efforts”.

The rich and the ‘super-rich’

Within each country, the authors also split the population into groups based on how much they spend, on average. Benedikt Bruckner – the lead author on the study, also from the University of Groningen  – tells Carbon Brief that while previous studies typically used four or five groups, this study uses more than 200.

The high number of “expenditure bins” allows for “more precise, more detailed [and] more accurate” analysis, Hubacek says.

When including bins, the spread of carbon footprints ranges from less than 0.01 tCO2 for more than a million people in sub-Saharan countries to hundreds of tonnes of CO2 for about 500,000 individuals at the top of the “global expenditure spectrum”, the authors find.

The authors then split the global population into the top 1%, next 9%, next 40% and bottom 50% of emitters. Their share of global emissions (left) and average carbon footprint (right) are shown in red, yellow, light blue and dark blue below, respectively.

The global share of carbon emissions (left) and average carbon footprints (right) of the top 1%, next 9%, next 40% and bottom 50% of emitters. Chart by Carbon Brief, using Highcharts. Credit: Bruckner et al (2022).

The study finds that the average carbon footprint in the top 1% of emitters is more than 75-times higher than that in the bottom 50%. 

This gap is “astonishing”, Dr Wiliam Lamb – a researcher at the Mercator Research Institute who was not involved in the study – tells Carbon Brief. He adds that responsibility for global emissions lies with the “super-rich”:

“In the public conversation on climate change, we often hear that actions taken in Europe or the US are meaningless when compared to the industrial emissions of China, or the effects of rapid population growth in Africa. This paper exposes these claims as wilfully ignorant, at best. By far the worst polluters are the super-rich, most of whom live in high income countries.”

Lamb notes that the expenditure of the “super-rich” may be even higher than suggested by this analysis, because “their earnings may be derived from investments, while their expenditures can be shrouded in secrecy.”

Dr Bruckner also highlights this underestimation, noting that while the highest carbon footprints in this study go up to hundreds of tonnes of CO2 per year, past studies into the super-rich have produced carbon footprint estimates of more than 1,000 tonnes per year. “The inequality is just insane,” he tells Carbon Brief. He adds:

“If we want to reduce our carbon emissions, we really need to do something about the consumption patterns of the super-rich.”

Eradicating poverty

In 2015, the United Nations set a series of Sustainable Development Goals – the first of which is to “end poverty in all its forms everywhere”. The goal focuses on eradicating “extreme poverty” – defined as living on less than US$1.90 per day – as well as halving poverty as defined by national poverty lines.

The map below shows the proportion of people in the 119 countries mapped are living in extreme poverty, from a low level (blue) to high (red). 

National population shares living below the extreme poverty line. Source: Bruckner et al (2022).

More than a billion people were living below the extreme poverty line of US$1.90 per day in 2014, according to the study. The authors find that “extreme poverty” is mostly concentrated in Africa and south Asia – where per capita CO2 emissions are generally the lowest.

“Carbon inequality is a mirror to extreme income and wealth inequality experienced at a national and global level today,” the study says.

To investigate how poverty alleviation would impact global carbon emissions, the authors devised a range of possible “poverty alleviation and eradication scenarios”.

These scenarios assume no changes in population or energy balance. Instead, they shift people living in poverty into an expenditure group above the poverty line – and assume that their consumption patterns and carbon footprints change accordingly given present-day consumption habits in their country.

The authors find that eradicating “extreme poverty” – by raising everyone above the US$1.90 per day threshold – would drive up global carbon emissions by less than 1%.

Countries in Africa and south Asia would see the greatest increase in emissions, the authors find. For example, they find that emissions in low and lower-middle income countries in sub-Saharan Africa – such as Madagascar – would double if everyone were lifted out of extreme poverty.

Meanwhile, the study finds that lifting 3.6 billion people over the poverty line of US$5.50 per day would drive an 18% increase in global emissions.

The study shows that “eradicating extreme poverty is not a concern for climate mitigation”, says Dr Narasimha Rao – an associate professor of energy systems at the Yale School of Environment, who was not involved in the study.

Warming targets

To meet the targets outlined in the Paris Agreement – of limiting global warming to 1.5C or “well below” 2C above pre-industrial levels – humanity has a limited “carbon budget” left to emit. 

The study investigates how the average carbon footprints of different countries line up with the Paris warming targets.

The graphic below shows average carbon footprints in a range of countries and regions, including the US, Middle East, North Africa and Turkey (MENAT) and sub-Saharan Africa. The colour of each column indicates the region’s average expenditure per person, measured using “purchasing power parity” to account for the different costs of living between different countries.

Regional average carbon footprints for countries and regions. The dotted lines indicate the carbon footprints needed to adhere to the temperature goals set out in the Paris Agreement. Source: Bruckner et al (2022).

The dotted lines show the target per-capita footprint that the world would need to adopt to limit warming to 2C (top line) and 1.5C (bottom line).

The authors find that according to existing literature, humanity needs to reach an average carbon footprint of 1.6-2.8tCO2 in the coming decade to limit warming to 1.5C or 2C above preindustrial levels.

In this chart, the US exceeds this amount the most dramatically. Meanwhile, individuals in sub-Saharan Africa are well below the global target range – emitting only 0.6tCO2 per year on average.

“From a climate justice perspective, the clear focus of climate policy should be on high emitters,” Lamb tells Carbon Brief. He adds:

“We have a moral imperative to reduce emissions as fast as possible in order to avoid climate impacts where they will land the worst – in the Global South – as well as to ease the burden of the transition on vulnerable populations.”

Dr Shonali Pachauri is a researcher at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, and was not involved in the study. She tells Carbon Brief that this analysis “shin[es] a light on the level of inequality in carbon emissions evident across the world today”. She adds:

“[The analysis] is critical to setting equitable and just targets for climate mitigation, such that those who contribute the most to current emissions mitigate the most in alignment with the UNFCCC’s common but differentiated responsibility and polluter pays principle.”

Bruckner et al (2022), Impacts of poverty alleviation on national and global carbon emissions, Nature Sustainability, doi:10.1038/s41893-021-00842-z

Climate crisis blamed as winter drought devastates crops in Spain and Portugal (Independent)

independent.co.uk

In Spain, rainfall this winter stands at only a third of the average in recent years

Feb. 14, 2022

The abandoned village of Aceredo near the dam of Lindoso in Lobios, Galicia, Spain, on 13 February 2022
(EPA)

In north-western Spain, the sight of roofs emerging from the surface of the water in the Lindoso reservoir is not uncommon at the height of particularly dry summers, but since the lake was first created three decades ago, this winter is the first time the flooded village of Aceredo has been revealed in its entirety.

The decrepit old stone works of the village are an indication of the extent of the severe winter drought impacting Spain and Portugal, which is now devastating crops after more than two months with no rain.

While 10 per cent of Spain has officially been declared as being under “prolonged drought,” large areas outside this categorisation, particularly in the south, also face extreme shortages that could impact the irrigation of crops.

Overall around 50 per cent of all Spanish farms are believed to be at risk due to the record low rainfall which is impacting rain-fed crops including cereals, olives, nuts and vineyards, which could lose 6 per cent to 8 per cent of their production, Spanish farming organisations have warned.

While the government is planning to spend around €570m (£477m) to improve irrigation systems, the lack of rainfall has been blamed on the worsening climate crisis.

Over the last three months of 2021, Spain recorded just 35 per cent of the average rainfall it had during the same period from 1981 to 2010. But there has been almost no rain since then.

Meanwhile in Portugal, 45 per cent of the country is currently experiencing “severe” or “extreme” drought conditions, Portuguese national weather agency IPMA said, with the climate crisis bringing hotter, drier conditions that make agriculture increasingly difficult.

IPMA climatologist Vanda Pires, Portugal told AP the agency had recorded an increase in the frequency of droughts over the past 20 to 30 years, with lower rainfall and higher temperatures.

“It’s part of the context of climate change,” she said.

People walk among damaged buildings in the abandoned village of Aceredo, which was was flooded in 1992 as part of a hydro-electric power project but has emerged as a consequence of the ongoing drought (EPA)

Scientists estimate that Portugal will see a drop in average annual rainfall of 20 per cent to 40 per cent by the end of the century.

According to the Spain’s national weather agency AEMET, only in 2005 has there been a January with almost no rain in this century.

If there is not significant rain within the next two weeks, emergency subsidies for farmers will be needed, Spanish authorities told AP.

Rubén del Campo, a spokesman for the Spanish weather service, said the below-average rainfall over the last six months was likely to continue for several more weeks, with hopes that spring will bring much-needed rainfall.

Satellite images show Spain’s third-largest reservoir, at Almendra in the Castilla y León, at just a third of its capacity. According to the Spanish meteorology and climatology State Agency, 2022 has started as the second driest year of the 21st century (European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery)

Spanish Agriculture Minister Luis Planas said last week the government would take emergency action if it did not rain in two weeks – likely to be financial support measures  for farmers to alleviate the loss of crops and revenues.

Additional reporting by AP.

‘On Brink of Catastrophe’: Horn of Africa Drought Kills Over 1.5 Million Livestock (Bloomberg)

bloomberg.com

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (EDITH M. LEDERER)

February 15, 2022, 12:25 AM GMT-3

Drought affected livestock walk toward a river near Biyolow Kebele, in the Adadle woreda of the Somali region of Ethiopia Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2022. Drought conditions have left an estimated 13 million people facing severe hunger in the Horn of Africa, according to the United Nations World Food Program. (Michael Tewelde/WFP via AP)

United Nations (AP) — Drought in the Horn of Africa has killed more than 1.5 million livestock and drastically cut cereal production, “and we are most definitely now sitting on the brink of catastrophe,” a senior official for the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said Monday.

Rein Paulsen, FAO’s director of emergencies and resilience who returned from the region Friday, said a “very small window” exists for taking urgent action, and a key is whether the region’s long rains between March and May are good — and whether the agency gets the $130 million it needs until June.

The short rains in the region, which includes parts of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya, were supposed to come between October and December but “were extremely poor,” he said. “And this represents the third consecutive failed rainy season with lower average rans, all of which has a severe impact on vulnerable households.”

The result of the drought meant that overall cereal production for the last rainy season in southern Somalia was estimated to be 58% lower than the long-term average, Paulsen said. In agricultural areas in marginal coastal zones in southeastern parts of Kenya, “we’re looking at crop production estimated to be 70% below average,” he said.

In addition, most places for water that have usually been resilient to climate variability have dried up in Kenya, he said during a virtual news conference from Rome.

Paulsen said $130 million in funding is essential now to provide cash for people to buy food until production resumes, to keep livestock alive and to provide drought-resistant seeds for farmers to reap a harvest.

“We have a window to the middle of this year — to June, which is a very time sensitive, narrow window for urgent actions to scale up to prevent a worst-case scenario,” Paulsen said. “Agriculture needs a lot more attention. It’s central to the survival of drought affected communities.”

During his visit to the region, Paulsen said: “We saw both livestock and wildlife carcasses by the side of the road as we were driving. We saw animals dying together with their farmers, and the numbers I think are quite shocking.”

In Kenya alone, 1.4 million livestock died in the final part of last year as a result of drought, and in southern Ethiopia, about 240,000 livestock died as a result of drought, he said.

Paulsen said that “it was quite traumatic driving through communities and seeing farmers tending livestock as they were dying by the side of the roads.”

Livestock are not only crucial to people’s livelihoods, he said, but they provide milk for children, and FAO is focused on providing urgent fodder and water to keep them alive.

The U.N. World Food Program said Feb. 8 that drought has left an estimated 13 million people in the Horn of Africa facing severe hunger amid the driest conditions since 1981. It is seeking $327 million to look after the urgent needs of 4.5 million people over the next six months.

Where mathematics and a social perspective meet data (Science Daily)

Date: February 10, 2022

Source: Wake Forest University

Summary: Community structure, including relationships between and within groups, is foundational to our understanding of the world around us.


Community structure, including relationships between and within groups, is foundational to our understanding of the world around us. New research by mathematics and statistics professor Kenneth Berenhaut, along with former postdoctoral fellow Katherine Moore and graduate student Ryan Melvin, sheds new light on some fundamental statistical questions.

“When we encounter complex data in areas such as public health, economics or elsewhere, it can be valuable to address questions regarding the presence of discernable groups, and the inherent “cohesion” or glue that holds these groups together. In considering such concepts, socially, the terms “communities,” “networks” and “relationships” may come to mind,” said Berenhaut.

The research leverages abstracted social ideas of conflict, alignment, prominence and support, to tap into the mathematical interplay between distance and cohesiveness — the sort evident when, say, comparing urban and rural settings. This enables adaptations to varied local perspectives.

“For example, we considered psychological survey-based data reflecting differences and similarities in cultural values between regions around the world — in the U.S., China, India and the EU,” Berenhaut said. “We observed distinct cultural groups, with rich internal network structure, despite the analytical challenges caused by the fact that some cohesive groups (such as India and the EU) are far more culturally diverse than others. Mark Twain once referred to India as ‘the country of a hundred nations and a hundred tongues, of a thousand religions and two million gods.’ Regions (such as the Southeast and California in the U.S.) can be perceived as locally distinct, despite their relative similarity in a global context. It is these sorts of characteristics that we are attempting to detect and understand.”

The paper, “A social perspective on perceived distances reveals deep community structure,” published by PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States) can be found here.

“I am excited by the manner in which a social perspective, along with a probabilistic approach, can illuminate aspects of communities inherent in data from a variety of fields,” said Berenhaut. “The concept of data communities proposed in the paper is derived from and aligns with a shared human social perspective. The work crosses areas with connections to ideas in sociology, psychology, mathematics, physics, statistics and elsewhere.”

Leveraging our experiences and perspectives can lead to valuable mathematical and statistical insights.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Wake Forest University. Original written by Kim McGrath. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kenneth S. Berenhaut, Katherine E. Moore, Ryan L. Melvin. A social perspective on perceived distances reveals deep community structure. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022; 119 (4): e2003634119 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2003634119

6 Things You Need to Know About Climate Change Now (Columbia Magazine)

magazine.columbia.edu

With global warming no longer just a threat but a full-blown crisis, Columbia experts are on the frontlines, documenting the dangers and developing solutions.

By David J. Craig | Winter 2021-22

David Swanson / Reuters

1. More scientists are investigating ways to help people adapt

Over the past half century, thousands of scientists around the world have dedicated their careers to documenting the link between climate change and human activity. A remarkable amount of this work has been done at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, in Palisades, New York. Indeed, one of the founders of modern climate science, the late Columbia geochemist Wally Broecker ’53CC, ’58GSAS, popularized the term “global warming” and first alerted the broader scientific community to the emerging climate crisis in a landmark 1975 paper. He and other Columbia researchers then set about demonstrating that rising global temperatures could not be explained by the earth’s natural long-term climate cycles. For evidence, they relied heavily on Columbia’s world-class collections of tree-ring samples and deep-sea sediment cores, which together provide a unique window into the earth’s climate history.

Today, experts say, the field of climate science is in transition. Having settled the question of whether humans are causing climate change — the evidence is “unequivocal,” according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — many scientists have been branching out into new areas, investigating the myriad ways that global warming is affecting our lives. Columbia scholars from fields as diverse as public health, agriculture, economics, law, political science, urban planning, finance, and engineering are now teaming up with climate scientists to learn how communities can adapt to the immense challenges they are likely to confront.

The University is taking bold steps to support such interdisciplinary thinking. Its new Columbia Climate School, established last year, is designed to serve as a hub for research and education on climate sustainability. Here a new generation of students will be trained to find creative solutions to the climate crisis. Its scholars are asking questions such as: How can communities best protect themselves from rising sea levels and intensifying storm surges, droughts, and heat waves? When extreme weather occurs, what segments of society are most vulnerable? And what types of public policies and ethical principles are needed to ensure fair and equitable adaptation strategies? At the same time, Columbia engineers, physicists, chemists, data scientists, and others are working with entrepreneurs to develop the new technologies that are urgently needed to scale up renewable-energy systems and curb emissions.

“The challenges that we’re facing with climate change are so huge, and so incredibly complex, that we need to bring people together from across the entire University to tackle them,” says Alex Halliday, the founding dean of the Columbia Climate School and the director of the Earth Institute. “Success will mean bringing the resources, knowledge, and capacity of Columbia to the rest of the world and guiding society toward a more sustainable future.”

For climate scientists who have been at the forefront of efforts to document the effects of fossil-fuel emissions on our planet, the shift toward helping people adapt to climate change presents new scientific challenges, as well as the opportunity to translate years of basic research into practical, real-world solutions.

“A lot of climate research has traditionally looked at how the earth’s climate system operates at a global scale and predicted how a given amount of greenhouse-gas emissions will affect global temperatures,” says Adam Sobel, a Columbia applied physicist, mathematician, and climate scientist. “The more urgent questions we face now involve how climate hazards vary across the planet, at local or regional scales, and how those variations translate into specific risks to human society. We also need to learn to communicate climate risks in ways that can facilitate actions to reduce them. This is where climate scientists need to focus more of our energy now, if we’re to maximize the social value of our work.”

A firefighter battles the Caldor Fire in Grizzly Flats, California in 2021
A firefighter battles the Caldor Fire in Grizzly Flats, California, last summer. (Fred Greaves / Reuters)
2. Big data will enable us to predict extreme weather

Just a few years ago, scientists couldn’t say with any confidence how climate change was affecting storms, floods, droughts, and other extreme weather around the world. But now, armed with unprecedented amounts of real-time and historical weather data, powerful new supercomputers, and a rapidly evolving understanding of how different parts of our climate system interact, researchers are routinely spotting the fingerprints of global warming on our weather.

“Of course, no individual weather event can be attributed solely to climate change, because weather systems are highly dynamic and subject to natural variability,” says Sobel, who studies global warming’s impact on extreme weather. “But data analysis clearly shows that global warming is tilting the scales of nature in a way that is increasing both the frequency and intensity of certain types of events, including heat waves, droughts, and floods.”

According to the World Meteorological Organization, the total number of major weather-related disasters to hit the world annually has increased five-fold since the 1970s. In 2021, the US alone endured eighteen weather-related disasters that caused at least $1 billion in damages. Those included Hurricanes Ida and Nicholas; tropical storms Fred and Elsa; a series of thunderstorms that devastated broad swaths of the Midwest; floods that overwhelmed the coasts of Texas and Louisiana; and a patchwork of wildfires that destroyed parts of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Arizona. In 2020, twenty-two $1 billion events struck this country — the most ever.

“The pace and magnitude of the weather disasters we’ve seen over the past couple of years are just bonkers,” says Sobel, who studies the atmospheric dynamics behind hurricanes. (He notes that while hurricanes are growing stronger as a result of climate change, scientists are not yet sure if they are becoming more common.) “Everybody I know who studies this stuff is absolutely stunned by it. When non-scientists ask me what I think about the weather these days, I say, ‘If it makes you worried for the future, it should, because the long-term trend is terrifying.’”

The increasing ferocity of our weather, scientists say, is partly attributable to the fact that warmer air can hold more moisture. This means that more water is evaporating off oceans, lakes, and rivers and accumulating in the sky, resulting in heavier rainstorms. And since hot air also wicks moisture out of soil and vegetation, regions that tend to receive less rainfall, like the American West, North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia, are increasingly prone to drought and all its attendant risks. “Climate change is generally making wet areas wetter and dry regions drier,” Sobel says.

Rescue workers helping a flood victim in China’s Henan Province in July 2021
Flooding killed at least three hundred people in China’s Henan Province in July. (Cai Yang / Xinhua via Getty Images)

But global warming is also altering the earth’s climate system in more profound ways. Columbia glaciologist Marco Tedesco, among others, has found evidence that rising temperatures in the Arctic are weakening the North Atlantic jet stream, a band of westerly winds that influence much of the Northern Hemisphere’s weather. These winds are produced when cold air from the Arctic clashes with warm air coming up from the tropics. But because the Arctic is warming much faster than the rest of the world, the temperature differential between these air flows is diminishing and causing the jet stream to slow down and follow a more wobbly path. As a result, scientists have discovered, storm systems and pockets of hot or cold air that would ordinarily be pushed along quickly by the jet stream are now sometimes hovering over particular locations for days, amplifying their impact. Experts say that the jet stream’s new snail-like pace may explain why a heavy rainstorm parked itself over Zhengzhou, China, for three days last July, dumping an entire year’s worth of precipitation, and why a heat wave that same month brought 120-degree temperatures and killed an estimated 1,400 people in the northwestern US and western Canada.

Many Columbia scientists are pursuing research projects aimed at helping communities prepare for floods, droughts, heat waves, and other threats. Sobel and his colleagues, for example, have been using their knowledge of hurricane dynamics to develop an open-source computer-based risk-assessment model that could help policymakers in coastal cities from New Orleans to Mumbai assess their vulnerability to cyclones as sea levels rise and storms grow stronger. “The goal is to create analytic tools that will reveal how much wind and flood damage would likely occur under different future climate scenarios, as well as the human and economic toll,” says Sobel, whose team has sought input from public-health researchers, urban planners, disaster-management specialists, and civil engineers and is currently collaborating with insurance companies as well as the World Bank, the International Red Cross, and the UN Capital Development Fund. “Few coastal cities have high-quality information of this type, which is necessary for making rational adaptation decisions.”

Radley Horton ’07GSAS, another Columbia climatologist who studies weather extremes; Christian Braneon, a Columbia civil engineer and climate scientist; and Kim Knowlton ’05PH and Thomas Matte, Columbia public-health researchers, are members of the New York City Panel on Climate Change, a scientific advisory body that is helping local officials prepare for increased flooding, temperature spikes, and other climate hazards. New York City has acted decisively to mitigate and adapt to climate change, in part by drawing on the expertise of scientists from Columbia and other local institutions, and its city council recently passed a law requiring municipal agencies to develop a comprehensive long-term plan to protect all neighborhoods against climate threats. The legislation encourages the use of natural measures, like wetland restoration and expansion, to defend against rising sea levels. “There’s a growing emphasis on attending to issues of racial justice as the city develops its adaptation strategies,” says Horton. “In part, that means identifying communities that are most vulnerable to climate impacts because of where they’re located or because they lack resources. We want to make sure that everybody is a part of the resilience conversation and has input about what their neighborhoods need.”

Horton is also conducting basic research that he hopes will inform the development of more geographically targeted climate models. For example, in a series of recent papers on the atmospheric and geographic factors that influence heat waves, he and his team discovered that warm regions located near large bodies of water have become susceptible to heat waves of surprising intensity, accompanied by dangerous humidity. His team has previously shown that in some notoriously hot parts of the world — like northern India, Bangladesh, and the Persian Gulf — the cumulative physiological impact of heat and humidity can approach the upper limits of human tolerance. “We’re talking about conditions in which a perfectly healthy person could actually die of the heat, simply by being outside for several hours, even if they’re resting and drinking plenty of water,” says Horton, explaining that when it is extremely humid, the body loses its ability to sufficiently perspire, which is how it cools itself. Now his team suspects that similarly perilous conditions could in the foreseeable future affect people who live near the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea, or even the Great Lakes. “Conditions in these places probably won’t be quite as dangerous as what we’re seeing now in South Asia or the Middle East, but people who are old, sick, or working outside will certainly be at far greater risk than they are today,” Horton says. “And communities will be unprepared, which increases the danger.”

How much worse could the weather get? Over the long term, that will depend on us and how decisively we act to reduce our fossil-fuel emissions. But conditions are likely to continue to deteriorate over the next two to three decades no matter what we do, since the greenhouse gases that we have already added to the atmosphere will take years to dissipate. And the latest IPCC report states that every additional increment of warming will have a larger, more destabilizing impact. Of particular concern, the report cautions, is that in the coming years we are bound to experience many more “compound events,” such as when heat waves and droughts combine to fuel forest fires, or when coastal communities get hit by tropical storms and flooding rivers simultaneously.

“A lot of the extreme weather events that we’ve been experiencing lately are so different from anything we’ve seen that nobody saw them coming,” says Horton, who points out that climate models, which remain our best tool for projecting future climate risks, must constantly be updated with new data as real-world conditions change. “What’s happening now is that the conditions are evolving so rapidly that we’re having to work faster, with larger and more detailed data sets, to keep pace.”

Soybeans
Soybean yields in many parts of the world are expected to drop as temperatures rise. (Rory Doyle / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
3. The world’s food supply is under threat

“A warmer world could also be a hungry one, even in the rich countries,” writes the Columbia environmental economist Geoffrey Heal in his latest book, Endangered Economies: How the Neglect of Nature Threatens Our Prosperity. “A small temperature rise and a small increase in CO2 concentrations may be good for crops, but beyond a point that we will reach quickly, the productivity of our present crops will drop, possibly sharply.”

Indeed, a number of studies, including several by Columbia scientists, have found that staple crops like corn, rice, wheat, and soybeans are becoming more difficult to cultivate as the planet warms. Wolfram Schlenker, a Columbia economist who studies the impact of climate change on agriculture, has found that corn and soybean plants exposed to temperatures of 90°F or higher for just a few consecutive days will generate much less yield. Consequently, he has estimated that US output of corn and soybeans could decline by 30 to 80 percent this century, depending on how high average temperatures climb.

“This will reduce food availability and push up prices worldwide, since the US is the largest producer and exporter of these commodities,” Schlenker says.

There is also evidence that climate change is reducing the nutritional value of our food. Lewis Ziska, a Columbia professor of environmental health sciences and an expert on plant physiology, has found that as CO2 levels rise, rice plants are producing grains that contain less protein and fewer vitamins and minerals. “Plant biology is all about balance, and when crops suddenly have access to more CO2 but the same amount of soil nutrients, their chemical composition changes,” he says. “The plants look the same, and they may even grow a little bit faster, but they’re not as good for you. They’re carbon-rich and nutrient-poor.” Ziska says that the molecular changes in rice that he has observed are fairly subtle, but he expects that as CO2 levels continue to rise over the next two to three decades, the changes will become more pronounced and have a significant impact on human health. “Wheat, barley, potatoes, and carrots are also losing some of their nutritional value,” he says. “This is going to affect everybody — but especially people in developing countries who depend on grains like wheat and rice for most of their calories.”

Experts also worry that droughts, heat waves, and floods driven by climate change could destroy harvests across entire regions, causing widespread food shortages. A major UN report coauthored by Columbia climate scientist Cynthia Rosenzweig in 2019 described the growing threat of climate-induced hunger, identifying Africa, South America, and Asia as the areas of greatest susceptibility, in part because global warming is accelerating desertification there. Already, some eight hundred million people around the world are chronically undernourished, and that number could grow by 20 percent as a result of climate change in the coming decades, the report found.

In hopes of reversing this trend, Columbia scientists are now spearheading ambitious efforts to improve the food security of some of the world’s most vulnerable populations. For example, at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), which is part of the Earth Institute, multidisciplinary teams of climatologists and social scientists are working in Ethiopia, Senegal, Colombia, Guatemala, Bangladesh, and Vietnam to minimize the types of crop losses that often occur when climate change brings more sporadic rainfall. The IRI experts, whose work is supported by Columbia World Projects, are training local meteorologists, agricultural officials, and farmers to use short-term climate-prediction systems to anticipate when an upcoming season’s growing conditions necessitate using drought-resistant or flood-resistant seeds. They can also suggest more favorable planting schedules. To date, they have helped boost crop yields in dozens of small agricultural communities.

“This is a versatile approach that we’re modeling in six nations, with the hope of rolling it out to many others,” says IRI director John Furlow. “Agriculture still dominates the economies of most developing countries, and in order to succeed despite increasingly erratic weather, farmers need to be able to integrate science into their decision-making.”

South Sudanese refugees gathering at a camp in Uganda
South Sudanese refugees gather at a camp in Uganda. (Dan Kitwood / Getty Images)
4. We need to prepare for massive waves of human migration

For thousands of years,the vast majority of the human population has lived in a surprisingly narrow environmental niche, on lands that are fairly close to the equator and offer warm temperatures, ample fresh water, and fertile soils.

But now, suddenly, the environment is changing. The sun’s rays burn hotter, and rainfall is erratic. Some areas are threatened by rising sea levels, and in others the land is turning to dust, forests to kindling. What will people do in the coming years? Will they tough it out and try to adapt, or will they migrate in search of more hospitable territory?

Alex de Sherbinin, a Columbia geographer, is among the first scientists attempting to answer this question empirically. In a series of groundbreaking studies conducted with colleagues at the World Bank, the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, New York University, Baruch College, and other institutions, he has concluded that enormous waves of human migration will likely occur this century unless governments act quickly to shift their economies away from fossil fuels and thereby slow the pace of global warming. His team’s latest report, published this fall and based on a comprehensive analysis of climatic, demographic, agricultural, and water-use data, predicts that up to 215 million people from Asia, Eastern Europe, Africa, and Latin America — mostly members of agricultural communities, but also some city dwellers on shorelines — will permanently abandon their homes as a result of droughts, crop failures, and sea-level rise by 2050.

“And that’s a conservative estimate,” says de Sherbinin, a senior research scientist at Columbia’s Center for International Earth Science Information Network. “We’re only looking at migration that will occur as the result of the gradual environmental changes occurring where people live, not massive one-time relocations that might be prompted by natural disasters like typhoons or wildfires.”

De Sherbinin and his colleagues do not predict how many climate migrants will ultimately cross international borders in search of greener pastures. Their work to date has focused on anticipating population movements within resource-poor countries in order to help governments develop strategies for preventing exoduses of their own citizens, such as by providing struggling farmers with irrigation systems or crop insurance. They also identify cities that are likely to receive large numbers of new residents from the surrounding countryside, so that local governments can prepare to accommodate them. Among the regions that will see large-scale population movements, the researchers predict, is East Africa, where millions of smallholder farmers will abandon drought-stricken lands and flock to cities like Kampala, Nairobi, and Lilongwe. Similarly, agricultural communities across Latin America, devastated by plummeting corn, bean, and coffee yields, will leave their fields and depart for urban centers. And in Southeast Asia, rice farmers and fishing families in increasingly flood-prone coastal zones like Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, home to twenty-one million people, will retreat inland.

But these migrations, if they do occur, do not necessarily need to be tragic or chaotic affairs, according to de Sherbinin. In fact, he says that with proper planning, and with input from those who are considering moving, it is even possible that large-scale relocations could be organized in ways that ultimately benefit everybody involved, offering families of subsistence farmers who would otherwise face climate-induced food shortages a new start in more fertile locations or in municipalities that offer more education, job training, health care, and other public services.

“Of course, wealthy nations should be doing more to stop climate change and to help people in developing countries adapt to environmental changes, so they have a better chance of thriving where they are,” he says. “But the international community also needs to help poorer countries prepare for these migrations. If and when large numbers of people do find that their lands are no longer habitable, there should be systems in place to help them relocate in ways that work for them, so that they’re not spontaneously fleeing droughts or floods as refugees but are choosing to safely move somewhere they want to go, to a place that’s ready to receive them.”

Man cooling off in a fire hydrant
Temperatures have become especially dangerous in inner cities as a result of the “urban heat island” effect. (Nina Westervelt / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
5. Rising temperatures are already making people sick

One of the deadliest results of climate change, and also one of the most insidious and overlooked, experts say, is the public-health threat posed by rising temperatures and extreme heat.

“Hot weather can trigger changes in the body that have both acute and chronic health consequences,” says Cecilia Sorensen, a Columbia emergency-room physician and public-health researcher. “It actually alters your blood chemistry in ways that make it prone to clotting, which can lead to heart attacks or strokes, and it promotes inflammation, which can contribute to a host of other problems.”

Exposure to severe heat, Sorensen says, has been shown to exacerbate cardiovascular disease, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, arthritis, migraines, depression, and anxiety, among other conditions. “So if you live in a hot climate and lack access to air conditioning, or work outdoors, you’re more likely to get sick.”

By destabilizing the natural environment and our relationship to it, climate change is endangering human health in numerous ways. Researchers at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health, which launched its innovative Climate and Health Program in 2010, have shown that rising temperatures are making air pollution worse, in part because smog forms faster in warmer weather and because wildfires are spewing enormous amounts of particulate matter into the atmosphere. Global warming is also contributing to food and drinking-water shortages, especially in developing countries. And it is expected to fuel transmission of dengue fever, Lyme disease, West Nile virus, and other diseases by expanding the ranges of mosquitoes and ticks. But experts say that exposure to extreme heat is one of the least understood and fastest growing threats.

“Health-care professionals often fail to notice when heat stress is behind a patient’s chief complaint,” says Sorensen, who directs the Mailman School’s Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education, an initiative launched in 2017 to encourage other schools of public health and medicine to train practitioners to recognize when environmental factors are driving patients’ health problems. “If I’m seeing someone in the ER with neurological symptoms in the middle of a heat wave, for example, I need to quickly figure out whether they’re having a cerebral stroke or a heat stroke, which itself can be fatal if you don’t cool the body down quickly. And then I need to check to see if they’re taking any medications that can cause dehydration or interfere with the body’s ability to cool itself. But these steps aren’t always taken.”

Sorensen says there is evidence to suggest that climate change, in addition to aggravating existing medical conditions, is causing new types of heat-related illnesses to emerge. She points out that tens of thousands of agricultural workers in Central America have died of an enigmatic new kidney ailment that has been dubbed Mesoamerican nephropathy or chronic kidney disease of unknown origin (CKDu), which appears to be the result of persistent heat-induced inflammation. Since CKDu was first observed among sugarcane workers in El Salvador in the 1990s, Sorensen says, it has become endemic in those parts of Central America where heat waves have grown the most ferocious.

“It’s also been spotted among rice farmers in Sri Lanka and laborers in India and Egypt,” says Sorensen, who is collaborating with physicians in Guatemala to develop an occupational-health surveillance system to spot workers who are at risk of developing CKDu. “In total, we think that at least fifty thousand people have died of this condition worldwide.”

Heat waves are now also killing hundreds of Americans each year. Particularly at risk, experts say, are people who live in dense urban neighborhoods that lack trees, open space, reflective rooftops, and other infrastructure that can help dissipate the heat absorbed by asphalt, concrete, and brick. Research has shown that temperatures in such areas can get up to 15°F hotter than in surrounding neighborhoods on summer days. The fact that these so-called “urban heat islands” are inhabited largely by Black and Latino people is now seen as a glaring racial inequity that should be redressed by investing in public-infrastructure projects that would make the neighborhoods cooler and safer.

“It isn’t a coincidence that racially segregated neighborhoods in US cities are much hotter, on average, than adjacent neighborhoods,” says Joan Casey, a Columbia epidemiologist who studies how our natural and built environments influence human health. In fact, in one recent study, Casey and several colleagues showed that urban neighborhoods that lack green space are by and large the same as those that in the 1930s and 1940s were subject to the racist practice known as redlining, in which banks and municipalities designated minority neighborhoods as off-limits for private lending and public investment. “There’s a clear link between that history of institutionalized racism and the subpar public infrastructure we see in these neighborhoods today,” she says.

Extreme heat is hardly the only environmental health hazard faced by residents of historically segregated neighborhoods. Research by Columbia scientists and others has shown that people in these areas are often exposed to dirty air, partly as a result of the large numbers of trucks and buses routed through their streets, and to toxins emanating from industrial sites. But skyrocketing temperatures are exacerbating all of these other health risks, according to Sorensen.

“A big push now among climate scientists and public-health researchers is to gather more street-by-street climate data in major cities so that we know exactly where people are at the greatest risk of heat stress and can more effectively advocate for major infrastructure upgrades in those places,” she says. “In the meantime, there are relatively small things that cities can do now to save lives in the summer — like providing people free air conditioners, opening community cooling centers, and installing more water fountains.”

Workers installing solar panels on the roof of a fish-processing plant in Zhoushan, China
Workers install solar panels on the roof of a fish-processing plant in Zhoushan, China. (Yao Feng / VCG via Getty Images)
6. We’re curbing emissions but need to act faster

Since the beginning ofthe industrial revolution, humans have caused the planet to warm 1.1°C (or about 2°F), mainly by burning coal, oil, and gas for energy. Current policies put the world on pace to increase global temperatures by about 2.6°C over pre-industrial levels by the end of the century. But to avoid the most catastrophic consequences of climate change, we must try to limit the warming to 1.5°C, scientists say. This will require that we retool our energy systems, dramatically expanding the use of renewable resources and eliminating nearly all greenhouse-gas emissions by mid-century.

“We’ll have to build the equivalent of the world’s largest solar park every day for the next thirty years to get to net zero by 2050,” says Jason Bordoff, co-dean of the Columbia Climate School. A leading energy-policy expert, Bordoff served on the National Security Council of President Barack Obama ’83CC. “We’ll also have to ramp up global investments in clean energy R&D from about $2 trillion to $5 trillion per year,” he adds, citing research from the International Energy Agency. “The challenge is enormous.”

Over the past few years, momentum for a clean-energy transition has been accelerating. In the early 2000s, global emissions were increasing 3 percent each year. Now they are rising just 1 percent annually, on average, with some projections indicating that they will peak in the mid-2020s and then start to decline. This is the result of a variety of policies that countries have taken to wean themselves off fossil fuels. European nations, for example, have set strict limits on industrial emissions. South Africa, Chile, New Zealand, and Canada have taken significant steps to phase out coal-fired power plants. And the US and China have enacted fuel-efficiency standards and invested in the development of renewable solar, wind, and geothermal energy — which, along with hydropower, account for nearly 30 percent of all electricity production in the world.

“It’s remarkable how efficient renewables have become over the past decade,” says Bordoff, noting that the costs of solar and wind power have dropped by roughly 90 percent and 70 percent, respectively, in that time. “They’re now competing quite favorably against fossil fuels in many places, even without government subsidies.”

But in the race to create a carbon-neutral global economy, Bordoff says, the biggest hurdles are ahead of us. He points out that we currently have no affordable ways to decarbonize industries like shipping, trucking, air travel, and cement and steel production, which require immense amounts of energy that renewables cannot yet provide. “About half of all the emission reductions that we’ll need to achieve between now and 2050 must come from technologies that aren’t yet available at commercial scale,” says Bordoff.

In order to fulfill the potential of solar and wind energy, we must also improve the capacity of electrical grids to store power. “We need new types of batteries capable of storing energy for longer durations, so that it’s available even on days when it isn’t sunny or windy,” he says.

Perhaps the biggest challenge, Bordoff says, will be scaling up renewable technologies quickly enough to meet the growing demand for electricity in developing nations, which may otherwise choose to build more coal- and gas-fueled power plants. “There are large numbers of people around the world today who have almost no access to electricity, and who in the coming years are going to want to enjoy some of the basic conveniences that we often take for granted, like refrigeration, Internet access, and air conditioning,” he says. “Finding sustainable ways to meet their energy needs is a matter of equity and justice.”

Bordoff, who is co-leading the new Climate School alongside geochemist Alex Halliday, environmental geographer Ruth DeFries, and marine geologist Maureen Raymo ’89GSAS, is also the founding director of SIPA’s Center on Global Energy Policy, which supports research aimed at identifying evidence-based, actionable solutions to the world’s energy needs. With more than fifty affiliate scholars, the center has, since its creation in 2013, established itself as an intellectual powerhouse in the field of energy policy, publishing a steady stream of definitive reports on topics such as the future of coal; the potential for newer, safer forms of nuclear energy to help combat climate change; and the geopolitical ramifications of the shift away from fossil fuels. One of the center’s more influential publications, Energizing America, from 2020, provides a detailed roadmap for how the US can assert itself as an international leader in clean-energy systems by injecting more federal money into the development of technologies that could help decarbonize industries like construction, transportation, agriculture, and manufacturing. President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, signed into law in November, incorporates many of the report’s recommendations, earmarking tens of billions of dollars for scientific research in these areas.

“When we sat down to work on that project, my colleagues and I asked ourselves: If an incoming administration wanted to go really big on climate, what would it do? How much money would you need, and where exactly would you put it?” Bordoff says. “I think that’s one of our successes.”

Which isn’t to say that Bordoff considers the climate initiatives currently being pursued by the Biden administration to be sufficient to combat global warming. The vast majority of the climate-mitigation measures contained in the administration’s first two major legislative packages — the infrastructure plan and the more ambitious Build Back Better social-spending bill, which was still being debated in Congress when this magazine went to press — are designed to reward businesses and consumers for making more sustainable choices, like switching to renewable energy sources and purchasing electric vehicles. A truly transformative climate initiative, Bordoff says, would also discourage excessive use of fossil fuels. “Ideally, you’d want to put a price on emissions, such as with a carbon tax or a gasoline tax, so that the biggest emitters are forced to internalize the social costs they’re imposing on everyone else,” he says.

Bordoff is a pragmatist, though, and ever mindful of the fact that public policy is only as durable as it is popular. “I think the American people are more divided on this than we sometimes appreciate,” he says. “Support for climate action is growing in the US, but we have to be cognizant of how policy affects everyday people. There would be concern, maybe even outrage, if electric or gas bills suddenly increased. And that would make it much, much harder to gain and keep support during this transition.”

Today, researchers from across the entire University are working together to pursue a multitude of strategies that may help alleviate the climate crisis. Some are developing nanomaterials for use in ultra-efficient solar cells. Others are inventing methods to suck CO2 out of the air and pump it underground, where it will eventually turn into chalk. Bordoff gets particularly excited when describing the work of engineers at the Columbia Electrochemical Energy Center who are designing powerful new batteries to store solar and wind power. “This is a team of more than a dozen people who are the top battery experts in the world,” he says. “Not only are they developing technologies to create long-duration batteries, but they’re looking for ways to produce them without having to rely on critical minerals like cobalt and lithium, which are in short supply.”

In his own work, Bordoff has recently been exploring the geopolitical ramifications of the energy transition, with an eye toward helping policymakers navigate the shifting international power dynamics that are likely to occur as attention tilts away from fossil fuels in favor of other natural resources.

But he believes the best ideas will come from the next generation of young people, who, like the students in the Climate School’s inaugural class this year, are demanding a better future. “When I see the growing sense of urgency around the world, especially among the younger demographics, it gives me hope,” he says. “The pressure for change is building. Our climate policies don’t go far enough yet, so something is eventually going to have to give — and I don’t think it’s going to be the will and determination of the young people. Sooner or later, they’re going to help push through the more stringent policies that we need. The question is whether it will be in time.”