Ocean heat record broken, with grim implications for the planet

https://lemmy.world/post/2640128

Ocean heat record broken, with grim implications for the planet - Lemmy.world

Remember when fossil fuel company scientists discovered their industry was warming the earth at an alarming rate? They predicted the end of humanity as we know it if we didn’t stop? And now people are seriously arguing the more proven science?
Honestly no, and not because it didn’t happen, but because it happened in 1896 before even my great grandparents were born. 127 years and 5 generations later and people are still denying that it’s happening at all and there’s been very little meaningful progress to move away from fossil fuels in that time. Things won’t start to get better until climate change kills enough people off that we can no longer sustain an industrial society.
Things will never get better. When we can’t sustain an industrial society then people will start murdering each other for the dwindling resources we have left. This is the best it’s going to ever be in anyone alive’s lifetime.
Well, maybe not for us, but the earth will eventually heal once we’re gone.
No it will not. There is absolutely zero evidence of that, and if anything, the ocean warming levels point to the contrary. It can just as easily spiral into the opposite direction and create a greenhouse style system like you see on Venus. Even if we died today, biodiversity levels would take millions of years to get back to pre-industrial levels.

Well, maybe not for us, but the earth will eventually heal once we’re gone.

Even if we died today, biodiversity levels would take millions of years to get back to pre-industrial levels.

So you agree.

No, I absolutely do not. In fact, that’s my most optimistic outlook. If ocean acidification continues at the rate it’s going, we’ll have complete collapse of the oceans, which are the core and source of our entire planet’s biosphere.

It’s also beyond fucking stupid to read some asshole playing the “gotcha” game when the answer won’t be visible in our lifetimes, and the solution needs to start happening today.

Earth documentary: release date, episode guide, interview and everything we know

Earth documentary on BBC Two sees Chris Packham explore the turbulent history of how our planet was shaped.

whattowatch.com

It’s a great show, I’ve seen it. The problem is the rate of ocean acidification is unprecedented at this speed in our geological history, and that our current level hasn’t been hit in 300 million years, and we’re still trucking. This could create an irreversible change.

The other thing to factor in is this will be it for intelligent life. We won’t get another chance at a species progressing the way we did because much of the world’s easily accessible oil has been used up.

@MercuryUprising

No previous life form based its expansion on oil like we did. And no previous life, in its unfathomable diversity, was even close to prior ones in shape, form or ability.

Why would you think that a future intelligent form would turn out like us and base its existence on fossil fuels?

Basic evolutionary and technological processes, I guess. Combustible fuels are the simplest step a species can take.

@MercuryUprising

Since every evolutionary era, when devastation then a rise of life occured, the new life forms were more advanced than the previous.

It's likely that whatever life develops after we're gone will find more ecologically-sound ways to progress than we did. And that's a good thing, cause we were for shit at it.