From #OWID: "#Deforestation is no longer inevitable"

https://ourworldindata.org/data-insights/deforestation-is-no-longer-inevitable

#Data seems to indicate that when the pressure subsides, the forests recover.

#environment

Deforestation is no longer inevitable

In the past, forests around the world were cut down on a massive scale. We lost some of the world’s richest ecosystems.

Our World in Data

Ich spiele ja gerne mit den Chart-Funktionen von #OWiD herum, weil ich die sehr gelungen finde.

Hier ein besonders aussagekräftiges Beispiel zur Entwicklung der #Stromerzeugung nach Erzeugungsart seit 2000 (erzeugte Menge, nicht installierte Leistung!).
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/electricity-production-by-source?stackMode=relative&time=2000..latest

Should be a goal that everyone has access to temperature-controlled environment (though not an #SDG, closest #SDG11). But old-fashioned #AirCondition units are grossly inefficient, pumping heat and humidity onto the street, making it someone else's problem. #OWiD ourworldindata.org/how-can-the-...
Bluesky

Bluesky Social
The Unbearable Anthropocentrism of Our World in Data

How billionaire elites help fund an Oxford statistics lab that makes the destruction of Earth look just great. Roughly a decade ago, a

CounterPunch.org
How Billionaire Elites Help Fund An Oxford Statistics Lab That Makes The Destruction Of Earth Look Just Great| Countercurrents

Roughly a decade ago, a 30-year-old economic statistician at Oxford University named Max Roser set out to transform the way we see

Countercurrents

The 20 year lag is quite something. It tells a story. That's some patience, before seeing the impact on the population at large!

"Smoking was a 20th-century problem. [..] it became steadily more common. By the 1960s, it was extremely widespread: on average, American adults [bought] more than 10 cigarettes every day."

https://ourworldindata.org/smoking-big-problem-in-brief

#OurWorldInData #OWID #opendata #smoking #lungcancer

Smoking: How large of a global problem is it? And how can we make progress against it?

Every year, around eight million people die prematurely as a result of smoking. But there are things we can do to prevent this.

Our World in Data
“Setting a net-zero target is great – the earlier the better. But there’s a risk that countries fixate too much on the end goal, and don’t care about how they get there.” #owid #ourworldindata #hannahritchie https://open.substack.com/pub/hannahritchie/p/net-zero-delay?r=5ah19&utm_medium=ios&utm_campaign=post
Net-zero: it’s not just where you end up, but how you get there that matters

Delaying emissions cuts makes climate change worse, even if countries reach net-zero in 2050.

Sustainability by numbers
Catching up on #30DayChartChallenge, I guess this one combines the last 3 days themes: #OWID, hazards, humans.
I like how the smoother helps see the overall trend of ozone recovery since the Montreal Protocol was adopted and how the bootstrap confidence interval reflects recent variation. Puzzled/concerned by the low 2020/2021 values, though.

Since I was already making these figures, might as well submit them for the #30DayChartChallenge Day6: #OWID.

CO2 emissions by regions and countries. Made in #Stata using the #treemap package (https://github.com/asjadnaqvi/stata-treemap). One of the hardest ones to code but it's pretty solid now.

GitHub - asjadnaqvi/stata-treemap: A Stata package for tree maps

A Stata package for tree maps. Contribute to asjadnaqvi/stata-treemap development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

For #Day6 of #30DayChartChallenge a #map to compare annual wather withdrawals between subregions of the world.

Based on #OWID data : https://ourworldindata.org/water-use-stress

#RStats code for waffleplots : https://github.com/BjnNowak/TidyTuesday/blob/main/SC_irrigation.R

Water Use and Stress

How much water do we use? How did it change over time?

Our World in Data