Within my own lifetime, the last 50 years, nearly 80% of the CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels, and close to 60 percent of all GHG emissions have been released.

There's been a near 70% decline in populations of existing wildlife species; and across the 8 million animal and plant species on earth, the human-induced extinction rate is now estimated at tens to hundreds of times greater than natural rates.

#BiodiversityDay reminds us that the profound crises we confront are just different sides of the same coin, and that our future is truly in our hands. The planet doesn't need us: we are the ones who rely on it for all the air we breathe, the water we drink, the resources we need. That's why our choices matter more today than ever: the path to a better future lies through these crises.

Read my essay here: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/one-planet-two-crises-tackling-climate-change-and-biodiversity-in-the-fight-for-our-future/

One Planet, Two Crises: Tackling Climate Change and Biodiversity in the Fight for Our Future

World Biodiversity Day reminds us that the profound crises we confront are just different sides of the same coin

Scientific American
@kathhayhoe hmmm what's your solutions without worsening living standards?
Or you just a data gatherer ?
Forgot to mention that emission have fallen significantly since 90s in many Western nations or per person
@Sam224466 @kathhayhoe she wrote: Policies implemented since the Paris Agreement have already reduced projected warming by end of century from about 4.5 degrees C to 2.8 degrees C. That’s a lot: but it’s still not enough.
@wifsten @kathhayhoe what more can it be done without making lives harder for the people or economy???a
@Sam224466 @kathhayhoe life will get much, much harder later - but less so if we rapidly decarbonize now
@wifsten @kathhayhoe bit of bs there ..like I said you just a useless data gatherer ..later on technology will be able to keep up with lowering the emissions..only 100 years ago we were using steam and now we produce much less per person all over the world
@Sam224466 @kathhayhoe can you cite some concrete, realistic examples of how technology will solve the problem? Anything really feasible on the horizon? Otherwise just wishful thinking