bookmark_borderThe Age of Loss and Damage

The Unfolding Crisis: Climate Change, Exponential Loss, and the Imperative for Action

by Daniel Brouse

Human-induced climate change has become an exponential force in an unordered system, echoing the principles of chaos theory. Dr. Christopher Trisos of the University of Cape Town aptly describes our current predicament as the “Age of Loss and Damage.” Despite being in its early stages, the repercussions for people, other species, ecosystems, and our world are already heart-wrenching, as emphasized in a BBC interview.

As of July 2023, the Earth’s average temperature surged to 17℃, a stark contrast to the 20th-century average of 13.9℃. The gravity of the situation was underscored by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in September 2023 when he declared that “climate breakdown has begun,” following the hottest Northern Hemisphere summer in recorded human history.

This climate breakdown is characterized by the creation of feedback loops and the crossing of tipping points. The consequences are dire: plant extinction, the disappearance of vital carbon sinks, and an unrelenting acceleration of the Earth’s temperature at an exponential pace. The threat extends beyond mere inconvenience; it jeopardizes our access to food, fresh water, and breathable air, potentially rendering our planet inhospitable to human life.

The European Space Agency’s Copernicus Climate Change Service reported a record-breaking average temperature of 16.38 degrees Celsius in September 2023, marking an alarming half-degree Celsius increase from the previous record set in 2020. Copernicus Director Carlo Buontempo rightly emphasized the severity of these changes, not as weather statistics but as a death sentence for people and ecosystems.

The UN’s Emission Gap Report in November 2023 delivered a sobering revelation: even if countries fulfill their emissions reduction pledges, global warming is projected to exceed +3°C this century. The International Cryosphere Climate Initiative echoed this sentiment, proclaiming that a 2-degree limit is dangerously high. The stark reality is that the melting of ice, indifferent to rhetoric, demands urgent action.

New Economics: Rethinking Economic Models in the Face of Crisis

Human-induced climate change, operating exponentially in an unordered system, necessitates a paradigm shift in economic thinking. The Age of Loss and Damage integrates economics, climate science, statistics, and physics to redefine how we perceive and address the economic impacts of climate change.

Traditional economic models, particularly “integrated assessment models” (IAMs), fall short in capturing the full spectrum of climate damage. IAMs rely on a quadratic function, squaring temperature changes to calculate GDP losses, while ignoring more suitable methods like the exponential function for rapid shifts. Thierry Philipponnat’s report from Finance Watch calls for a reevaluation of economic models to address the growing disruption of climate risk in the financial system.

However, even scientists struggle to comprehend and predict the rapid acceleration of climate change. The Domino Effect, or “tipping cascades,” reveals the underestimation of social-ecological systems. Record-breaking physical and economic impacts in 2023 served as a wake-up call, highlighting the urgency of understanding and mitigating climate-related tipping cascades.

Exponential Impact on Health, Real Estate, and Infrastructure

Climate change poses significant threats to human health, impacting air quality, water supply, and contributing to extreme weather events. Deadly humid heat emerges as a major short-term risk, with mental distress affecting most survivors of climate-related disasters. Anxiety related to climate change is reported by more than two-thirds of U.S. adults who have not experienced climate disasters.

Widespread challenges in food, energy, and water security, coupled with the unsustainability of infrastructure, signal the profound implications of a warmer world. Real estate, from personal property to essential infrastructure, faces increasing risks due to climate change. Dr. Sidd Mukherjee’s insights into violent rain events and storm surges emphasize the need for proactive measures and managed retreat strategies.

Litigation and Change: A Catalyst for Transformation

The catalyst for transformative change may lie in loss and damage litigation against oil companies and governments. Comparable to the tobacco industry’s reckoning, consumers may hold oil companies accountable for misleading information about the dangers of fossil fuels. Children globally are filing lawsuits against governments, asserting their basic human rights to a clean environment.

Conclusion: Welcome to the Age of Loss and Damage

Tipping points triggered by climate change threaten to release stored CO2 in nature, with potentially catastrophic consequences. The Earth’s temperature, already at risk of exceeding 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, faces the prospect of an additional 6-degree rise. This trajectory is untenable, rendering vast regions of the Earth uninhabitable.

For the first time, global warming is set to continue regardless of human actions. While we cannot reverse the damage already done, immediate cessation of greenhouse gas emissions is imperative. Simultaneously, adapting our habitat to impede nature’s greenhouse gas emissions becomes a crucial strategy.

Our climate model uses chaos theory in an attempt to adequately account for humans and forecasts a global average temperature increase of 9 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The Age of Loss and Damage has arrived, demanding a collective response.

What Can You Do?

Individual actions matter in the face of this crisis. Reduce pollution, transition away from fossil fuels, consume less, and embrace love and compassion. The responsibility to protect our planet rests on every individual. Here is a list of additional actions you can take.
The Age of Loss and Damage / Brouse (2023)

How is All Real Estate at Risk From Climate Change? / Brouse and Mukherjee (2024)
Toppled Tipping Points: The Domino Effect / Brouse and Mukherjee (2023)
Tipping Cascades, Social-Ecological Systems, and the Hottest Year in History / Brouse (2024)

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

 

bookmark_borderOccupy Philly Wells Fargo Trial: Not Guilty

PHILADELPHIA, PA — It has been over a year since 12 members of the Occupy Philadelphia movement were arrested inside a Wells Fargo bank in center city Philadelphia. This week they were put on trial in front of jury facing charges of criminal trespass and conspiracy.

The defendants put on a strong defense based on the 1st Amendment’s right to free assembly, as well as, “justification” due to imminent danger being caused by Wells Fargo. During the trial, character witnesses pointed out the contributions the defendants have been making since their arrests including: forming Inter-occupy, Occupy Sandy and organizing a new community center.

On March 5, 2013 the jury returned the verdict — not guilty of conspiracy and defiant trespass.

VIDEO FOOTAGE OF THE WELLS FARGO PROTEST

bookmark_borderOccupy Philadelphia Events for the Week

PHILADELPHIA, PA — The Occupy Philly movement posts their calender for November 2 – 9, 2012:

Sunday December 2nd, 3pm – Strike Debt Philly! Meeting – Wooden Shoe Books – 704 South St – Strike Debt Philly is a local chapter of a growing movement to confront and resist all forms of debt. For more information on Strike Debt and to download a copy of the Debt Resistors’ Operations Manual, visit: StrikeDebt.org You can join our email list at https://lists.riseup.net/www/info/strikedebtphilly-announce and our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/StrikeDebtPhilly. Please join us at one of our weekly meetings, and be on the lookout for upcoming teach-ins, debtors assemblies and other street actions!

Please join us for our second, monthly Interfaith Working Group support group and potluck supper in West Philly (191434) from 6-8 PM. Contact Amy at aokietzman@aol.com for full details. Please bring some good, simple vegetarian food to share. We will be meeting regularly on the first Sunday of the month to share a simple meal, to share whats on our hearts, as well as any projects we are doing. Prayers, songs and short scripture readings may also be shared as the spirit moves. We remain open to the possibility that projects may arise in the future that we may all want to collaborate on.

Monday December 3rd, 6:30pm – Friends Center – 1501 Cherry St – Movie Mondays hosted by the Envision Peace Museum. Movies will the first Monday of Each month from October – December. The last film in the series will the short film “The Story of Stuff”, followed by the feature film “Affluenza”. This feature length documentary explores the high social costs of materialism and overconsumption

It’s on! The DEBATE is on! Mon., 12/3, 6 pm Temple University Gladfelter Hall (11th & Berks), Room 107. Free Admission to a debate between Dr. Anthony Monteiro and Attorney Michael Coard on the topics of “President Obama: Sell-Out, Savior, Neither, or Both?” and “Real Social Change: Through Revolution or Reform?” Check out the Radio Courtroom show on Wednesday AND Sunday at noon on WURD 900-AM for details. www.900amwurd.com. (Sponsored by ATAC 215-552-8751)

Tuesday, December 4th: Tools and Analytics for Understanding Usage of Your Website – As 2012 comes to a close, why not take stock of who’s visiting your website, and learn to track — and respond to — your website usage in 2013? Our next Philly Net Tuesday will focus on helping you do just that. We’ll gather at the Friends Center, 1501 Cherry Street, on Net Tuesday, December 4. Join us for light refreshments and networking at 6:00P, and the program will begin at 6:20. Can’t make it to downtown Philly? Watch the live Internet stream at http://phillynetsquared.org/live, and share your comments and questions via Twitter with the hashtag #phlnet2. Your website and Google are the first stop your stakeholders make to find out about, contribute to, or get involved with your organization or cause. Learn how to understand what drives visitors to your website, what keeps them there, how much you’re drawing from social media, and what inspires them to transform their involvement from “passive bystander” to volunteer, donor, or outspoken advocate.
Nathan Gasser and Andrew Sather will lead a discussion and hands-on demonstration of Google Analytics and Google Webmaster Tools — two free, complimentary services that help organizations learn more about their visitors, boost their online visibility, and gain insights about how they can improve the user experience. We’ll dig into what both tools have to offer your nonprofit, how you can start using them right away, and what to do with the data once you’ve collected it. (We’ll also touch upon some tools from non-Google sources.) This session will respond to the needs of the group. Whether you’re coming from a marketing/outreach angle or a technical perspective, and whether you’ve never heard of these tools before or have been using them for years. Important: We’re looking for websites for special attention. If you have a website with Google Analytics installed for more than a year, we want your help (and to help you!). We’re seeking a volunteer willing to open up their Google Analytics account to the crowd and to our presenters during Net Tuesday. We’ll analyze how visitors use your site and suggest ideas to improve usability, accomplish your online goals, and get to know your users a little better. If interested, please fill in this form. RSVP’s via Meetup or Facebook are appreciated for planning purposes, but not required. Thanks to the American Friends Service Committee for sponsorship.

Thursday December 6th, 7pm – Wooden Shoe Books – 704 South St – At its core, Spit and Passion is about the transformative moment when music crashes into a stifling adolescent bedroom and saves you. Suddenly, you belong. At twelve years old, Cristy C. Road is struggling to balance tradition in a Cuban Catholic family with her newfound queer identity, and begins a chronic obsession with the punk band Green Day. In this stunning graphic biography, Road renders the clash between her rich inner world of fantasy and the numbing suburban conformity she is surrounded by. She finds solace in the closet—where she lets her deep excitement about punk rock foment, and finds in that angst and euphoria a path to self-acceptance. -Cristy C. Road is a young Cuban American artist and writer from Miami; she currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. She has reached cult status for work that captures the beauty of the imperfect.

Friday December 7th, 7pm – Wooden Shoe Books – 704 South St – How do we develop and evaluate effective tactics and sound strategies? Effective tactics are essential to any organizing effort. As part of sound strategies, they make goals attainable. During this presentation, we’ll explore how effectics tactics and sound strategies are formed systematically. We’ll also explore the importance of context in forming theories and plans. The presentation will conclude with the introduction of a project that is likely to change the way organizing is done in Philly and perhaps beyond. Presented by local autonomist organizer Lucid Strike.

Events listed here include Occupy Philly related events as well as other social justice events. For more updates be sure to check the Occupy Philadelphia Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/OccupyPhiladelphia. Your support is greatly appreciated!