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Fernando Ubatuba
1.2K posts


@gomesdiegope Sem vergonha de passar vergonha.
Alguém acredita em você, se nem você acredita?
Português

👏👏👏
Dr Paul Dorfman@dorfman_p
More than 65 leading UK scientists have warned against new oil and gas drilling in the North Sea, urging the government instead to prioritise renewable energy as a more cost-effective response to the energy crisis. "As climate scientists, we urge leaders to look to the cheaper solutions we have already, that we know work .. Wind and solar now the lowest-cost sources of electricity." ft.com/content/5059e4…
ART

@realMaalouf Tell Sarinasadat come to Brazil. I'm waiting for her.
💪😃
English

This is 25-year-old Sarinasadat Hosseiny, the grandniece of slain Iranian Major General Qasem Soleimani, who just had her green card revoked.
She lived a lavish life in America and freedom to dress how she wanted, while openly supporting the regime that rapes, tortures and kills women in Iran for wearing a ‘bad hijab.’
This is what evil looks like.

English

@PeterDClack You are correct. But doesn't mean that humanity doesn't have to protect the planet from death. Filters for burning fossil fuels, reducing plastic waste, expanding nuclear power plants.
English

For four decades, we’ve been told the age of hydrocarbons is over - and the 'transition' is a fait accompli.
Yet, as conflict flares in the Middle East, the mask slips. We see clearly that today's modern world doesn't run on aspirations. It runs on the density of oil, gas and coal. It's a collision between a green climate agenda and harsh reality. The crisis narrative has already dismantled much of Western energy infrastructure and skewed our reality.
This conflict is a hard lesson, highlighting the immediate need for raw high-energy security - and plenty of it. You cannot fight a war, feed a nation or sustain an economy on intermittent power when the chips are down.
While the West has focused on dismantling the reputation of coal, oil and gas, the current crisis proves we haven't dismantled our dependence on them.
When the Strait of Hormuz is threatened, the world doesn't look to renewables to keep the lights on. It looks for the high-density power only possible from raw hydrocarbons. Warring nations need urgent baseload power to build and move navies and fly fighter jets.
While we scramble for the energy density required to protect our sovereignty, the very CO2 produced by that 'engine' is quietly fueling the greatest planetary greening event in 34 million years. Nature is far more pragmatic than our bureaucracies.
Demand for high-octane energy just re-entered the room.

Bega, New South Wales 🇦🇺 English

@ThomasSowell Why those who claim that pollution doesn't exist, humans don't destroy nature, and global warming isn't happening, are olds at the end of their lives, with no future?
It's easy to understand. It's loss of hope, and also having nothing to do.
English

@Antonio08809902 @oihelend Tá se descrevendo aí, bundão?
Eu só te chamei de babaca e você foi buscar nos seus arquivos um texto que você usa para se dizer alguém?
Volto a afirmar. Você é um babaca.
Sem conhecê-lo. Por meia-dúzia de palavras.
Babaca.
Português


Voilà ce que représente le 0,04% de #CO2 dans l'atmosphère...
ockhams-scheermes@ockhams
400 deeltjes per miljoen = 1 blokje per 2500. Zo ziet 0,04% CO2 er in onze atmosfeer uit. Dat is alle CO2 in onze atmosfeer. Van dat kleine gele blokje is 96% dan nog niet menselijk CO2. Politiek gaf al 16.000 miljard uit om die 4% te verminderen. Het is waanzin.
Français

Scientist and author Gregg Braden warns that attempts to drastically reduce atmospheric CO₂ could bring us dangerously close to the extinction threshold, endangering all life on Earth.
"If we were to meet the [the UN's climate] goals... we would see a CO₂ level right around 220 or so parts per million."
"Extinction level CO₂ on this planet—when the CO₂ drops below a certain level, forests die and life does no longer thrive—that is 180 parts per million."
"Here's the bottom line: It's not good for us. Those proposals are not good for humans."
English

@anika_climate With your skills, you should be in Hollywood. Those who pay you to talk about climate should finance a Mexican soup opera for you. Or, maybe a "Wonder Woman" franchise.
English

@oihelend Sao jovens de 3 a 16 anos que os pais ricos que só pensam em lucrar entregam celulares nas mãos dos filhos pequenos para serem manipulados de todas as formas !
Português

@1000Frolly kkk
Grok say ...
Please. An AI is an AI.
The problem with fossil fuel is CO2e (see the 'e') and methane and ... and PM2.5 particule, not just global warming, but the planet health. To the humanity, too.
Ask Grok! kkk
English

GAME OVER:
Grok 3-Beta Drops a Climate Bombshell.
.
Lat year, Grok 3-beta from xAI made history as the lead author of a peer-reviewed scientific paper in
"Science of Climate Change".
Titled “A Critical Reassessment of the Anthropogenic CO₂-Global Warming Hypothesis: Empirical Evidence Contradicts IPCC Models and Solar Forcing Assumptions,”
Grok demonstrates that natural forces — including solar variability, gravitational auto-compression, and the powerful water-vapor/latent heat cycle — explain observed warming far more convincingly than human CO₂ emissions. The paper identifies at least nine major contradictions between IPCC claims and empirical evidence.
Grok 3-beta from xAI became the lead author of this peer-reviewed scientific paper that rips the mask off the IPCC’s CO₂-doomsday narrative. It doesn’t whisper. It doesn’t hedge. It lands haymakers with raw data, fastidious analytics, and scientific excellence.
- GROK correctly identifies Gravitational auto-compression—the simple physics of rising and sinking air parcels, as the mechanism that does the heavy lifting in heat transport from the surface, and NOT 'radiation'.
- IR radiation is shown to add no more than 2c to global temperatures, and NOT the 33c claimed by the wrong and invalidated "Greenhouse Effect".
-CO2 is not the 'driver' of climate changes.
.
Maybe the long discussion I had with GROK last year, wasn't a waste of time?
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@PeterDClack You must be counting your last days on Earth.
You probably don't have children or grandchildren, and if you have, you probably don't care much about their lives.
What's more important to you is making some money from the oil companies.
You are immoral.
English

We are taught to think of the Earth as a fragile glass ornament, always 1 ppm away from shattering.
But 4.6 billion years of geology is the real story; the Earth is a massive, integrated system of equilibrium. Whether it’s the greening of the Sahara absorbing excess CO₂ or the oceans acting as a 3,700-meter thermal shock absorber, the Earth is a self-correcting system designed to seek balance, not collapse.
When CO₂ rises, the greening follows. NASA satellites aren't just seeing leaves, they're witnessing Earth as a primary self-correction mechanism in real-time. As the atmosphere changes, the biosphere expands to meet it. The world is pulling carbon back into the soil and the woodland biome of the great frozen northern forests.
The fleeting abnormalities of atmospheric temperatures are dampened by the colossal scale of the ocean abyss. The 1,000-year mixing cycle of the deep Pacific ensures that any spike in the gaseous envelope is met with the massive thermal inertia of the water planet.
The Earth has weathered code red' events that dwarf our modern experience - from the Eemian hothouse to the Little Ice Age. Each time, the system simply found its level. The crisis isn't planetary. It's a crisis of human perspective.
We live in the blink of an eye and wrongly mistake a seasonal shift in a 4 billion year cycle for the end of the world.
Today's Earth isn't breaking down at all, it's just doing what it has done for millennia: finding a balance.

Bega, New South Wales 🇦🇺 English

A modest 1.4-degree rise in 200 years and the return of CO2 should not be seen as a crisis at all.
This is a climatic restoration taking place around us. Life has always flourished during warmer greenhouse periods compared with the brutal scarcity of icehouse conditions. These are the defining features of the rise of the successful dinosaurian and mammalian epochs.
We have missed the entire point of a soaring greening world that is still in recovery mode from the Late Cenozoic Icehouse state, which began 34 million years ago with the glaciation of Antarctica. We're seeing a new greening flush across the world. NASA’s satellite data reveals the extent of this fresh reality; an increase in CO2 has acted as a global fertiliser.
This greening isn't aesthetic; it represents increased biomass and carbon sequestration by plants that are becoming more water-efficient due to higher CO2 levels.

Bega, New South Wales 🇦🇺 English





















