TODAY

Pacquiao ponders ring retirement, political plans after loss_Camiguin - Philippine Life, Filipinos, Philippines

Date: 2022-08-15 18:12:29  |  Author: PeraPlay.ORG  |  Views: 76509 | Camiguin

  • Tinkering with the planet's air to cool Earth’s ever-warming climate is inching closer to reality enough so that two different high-powered groups — one of scientists and one of former world leaders — are trying to come up with ethics and governing guidelines.On Thursday, the newly formed Climate Overshoot Commission — which includes the former presidents of Mexico, Niger and Kiribati, a former Canadian prime minister, the ex-chief of World Trade Organization and other national minister level officials — will have its first meeting in Italy in a 15-month process to come up with governance strategy on pulling carbon dioxide out of the air, lowering temperatures by reflecting sunlight with artificial methods and adapting to climate change. This month, the American Geophysical Union, the largest society of scientists who work on climate issues, announced it was forming an ethics framework for “climate intervention” that would be ready for debate during the major international climate negotiations in November in Egypt.This shows the idea of “solar geoengineering is finally getting serious,” said Harvard University climate scientist David Keith, a leader in the field.Both groups said they aren’t quite advocating geoengineering, which includes putting particles in the air to reflect sunlight or whiten clouds, or the less-disputed carbon dioxide removal, such as technology to suck carbon out of the air but also more nature-based solutions such as more trees and getting oceans to sponge up more carbon. But the two groups say the ideas need to be discussed with global warming nearing and likely shooting past the international goal of limiting temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) since preindustrial times. The world has already warmed 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since the mid-1800s and scientists say the world likely to pass the 1.5-degree mark in the 2030s.RecommendedTrump ordered armed supporters to Capitol, lunged for steering wheelMetropolitan Police placed under special measures by watchdog“The climate change problem is at a point where even extreme options need to be thought about seriously,” Climate Overshoot Commission Executive Secretary Jesse Reynolds said in a Monday interview. “Now, to be clear, thinking about them includes the possibility of rejecting them. But not thinking about them does not seem to be a responsible path forward.”What’s needed are ethical guidelines before anything is done to get the public trust, much like the scientific community did with the possibility of human cloning, said AGU Executive Director Randy Fiser said. If this doesn’t happen the public will have a giant backlash and won’t trust the community, said National Academy of Sciences President Marcia McNutt, who has studied the issue but declined a spot on the AGU ethics panel because of other commitments.An earlier report by the academy “spoke to the double moral hazard of climate intervention: damned if you do, damned if you don’t,” McNutt said.Opponents of geoengineering — such as Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann — worry that just talking about guidelines will make the tinkering more likely to occur in the real world.“I see it as a potentially cynical maneuver to buy the ostensible moral license to move forward with dangerous geoengineering prescriptions,” Mann said in an email. He said not only could there be harmful side effects, but it takes the pressure off of cutting fossil fuel emissions, which is what’s really needed.Mann also said no one can enforce ethics or governance rules, citing efforts to prevent Russia from invading Ukraine, but McNutt pointed to rules governing international oceans.With or without guidelines, some of these high-tech ideas are going to happen, leaders of the two groups said. However, last year the Swedish government canceled an early but politically charged test of a device designed to put particles in the air that eventually, if fully implanted, could create what some would call an artificial volcano cooling the globe temporarily like 1991’s Mt. Pinatubo’s eruption in the Philippines. “The work of looking at climate strategies continues to go on in labs, both in the for-profit and non-profit sectors,” said AGU’s Fiser, who said investors are funneling money into such projects. Ethicists Nancy Tuana of Penn State and Christopher Preston of the University of Montana said if anything talking about the ethics of the tinkering with the atmosphere will put the brakes on efforts a bit more.“It will slow it and this is a good thing,” Preston said in an email. “Ethical thresholds placed within frameworks are typically challenging to satisfy... An ethical framework can lead to paralysis. Ethics is not like maths. Ethical problems don’t often get ‘solved’.”But not doing anything — no cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, no carbon dioxide removal and no solar geoengineering — “that’s the worst outcome and also the path of least resistance,” said Stanford University ethics expert Hank Greely.“I view climate intervention in the same way I view the ‘Hail Mary’ pass in football,” said Colorado University ice scientist Waleed Abdalati, a former NASA chief scientist, referring to a last ditch desperation effort in a seemingly losing cause. “There is a chance it could get us to where we need to be, but just as no team wants to be in a position where that is the play they have to make, scientists recognize that we as a society would never want to be in a situation that we have to use such an approach to address the challenge we face.”___Follow AP’s climate coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate___Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbearsRecommendedBritish army chief warns UK must act to prevent war and says Ukraine is new ‘1937 moment’NATO chief: alliances faces biggest challenge since WWIIAustralia prioritizes reducing emissions and cheaper EVs___Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    PeraPley.Net - Filipino Rich Man!

    Tinkering with the planet's air to cool Earth’s ever-warming climate is inching closer to reality enough so that two different high-powered groups — one of scientists and one of former world leaders — are trying to come up with ethics and governing guidelines.On Thursday, the newly formed Climate Overshoot Commission — which includes the former presidents of Mexico, Niger and Kiribati, a former Canadian prime minister, the ex-chief of World Trade Organization and other national minister level officials — will have its first meeting in Italy in a 15-month process to come up with governance strategy on pulling carbon dioxide out of the air, lowering temperatures by reflecting sunlight with artificial methods and adapting to climate change. This month, the American Geophysical Union, the largest society of scientists who work on climate issues, announced it was forming an ethics framework for “climate intervention” that would be ready for debate during the major international climate negotiations in November in Egypt.This shows the idea of “solar geoengineering is finally getting serious,” said Harvard University climate scientist David Keith, a leader in the field.Both groups said they aren’t quite advocating geoengineering, which includes putting particles in the air to reflect sunlight or whiten clouds, or the less-disputed carbon dioxide removal, such as technology to suck carbon out of the air but also more nature-based solutions such as more trees and getting oceans to sponge up more carbon. But the two groups say the ideas need to be discussed with global warming nearing and likely shooting past the international goal of limiting temperature increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) since preindustrial times. The world has already warmed 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since the mid-1800s and scientists say the world likely to pass the 1.5-degree mark in the 2030s.RecommendedTrump ordered armed supporters to Capitol, lunged for steering wheelMetropolitan Police placed under special measures by watchdog“The climate change problem is at a point where even extreme options need to be thought about seriously,” Climate Overshoot Commission Executive Secretary Jesse Reynolds said in a Monday interview. “Now, to be clear, thinking about them includes the possibility of rejecting them. But not thinking about them does not seem to be a responsible path forward.”What’s needed are ethical guidelines before anything is done to get the public trust, much like the scientific community did with the possibility of human cloning, said AGU Executive Director Randy Fiser said. If this doesn’t happen the public will have a giant backlash and won’t trust the community, said National Academy of Sciences President Marcia McNutt, who has studied the issue but declined a spot on the AGU ethics panel because of other commitments.An earlier report by the academy “spoke to the double moral hazard of climate intervention: damned if you do, damned if you don’t,” McNutt said.Opponents of geoengineering — such as Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann — worry that just talking about guidelines will make the tinkering more likely to occur in the real world.“I see it as a potentially cynical maneuver to buy the ostensible moral license to move forward with dangerous geoengineering prescriptions,” Mann said in an email. He said not only could there be harmful side effects, but it takes the pressure off of cutting fossil fuel emissions, which is what’s really needed.Mann also said no one can enforce ethics or governance rules, citing efforts to prevent Russia from invading Ukraine, but McNutt pointed to rules governing international oceans.With or without guidelines, some of these high-tech ideas are going to happen, leaders of the two groups said. However, last year the Swedish government canceled an early but politically charged test of a device designed to put particles in the air that eventually, if fully implanted, could create what some would call an artificial volcano cooling the globe temporarily like 1991’s Mt. Pinatubo’s eruption in the Philippines. “The work of looking at climate strategies continues to go on in labs, both in the for-profit and non-profit sectors,” said AGU’s Fiser, who said investors are funneling money into such projects. Ethicists Nancy Tuana of Penn State and Christopher Preston of the University of Montana said if anything talking about the ethics of the tinkering with the atmosphere will put the brakes on efforts a bit more.“It will slow it and this is a good thing,” Preston said in an email. “Ethical thresholds placed within frameworks are typically challenging to satisfy... An ethical framework can lead to paralysis. Ethics is not like maths. Ethical problems don’t often get ‘solved’.”But not doing anything — no cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, no carbon dioxide removal and no solar geoengineering — “that’s the worst outcome and also the path of least resistance,” said Stanford University ethics expert Hank Greely.“I view climate intervention in the same way I view the ‘Hail Mary’ pass in football,” said Colorado University ice scientist Waleed Abdalati, a former NASA chief scientist, referring to a last ditch desperation effort in a seemingly losing cause. “There is a chance it could get us to where we need to be, but just as no team wants to be in a position where that is the play they have to make, scientists recognize that we as a society would never want to be in a situation that we have to use such an approach to address the challenge we face.”___Follow AP’s climate coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate___Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbearsRecommendedBritish army chief warns UK must act to prevent war and says Ukraine is new ‘1937 moment’NATO chief: alliances faces biggest challenge since WWIIAustralia prioritizes reducing emissions and cheaper EVs___Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

NEWS

  • Meet the bookmakers betting on great white sharks
  • Martiallaw era remembered under a new Marcos presidency
  • KPop singer sentenced to three years in prison over sex scandal
  • Meet the bookmakers betting on great white sharks
  • Raducanu and Fernandez bid for teenage dream US Open win
  • Explorers find WWII Navy destroyer, deepest wreck discovered
  • India bans exports of wheat, citing threat to food security
  • Amid outcry, states push mental health training for police
  • Indiana casino executive charged in illegal campaign scheme
  • US official warns Asian aggressors will face Western might
  • How much for gas? Around the world, pain is felt at the pump
  • US destroyer patrol inflames South China Sea dispute
  • Gambling addicts targeted by Google ads for online casinos
  • China ship shadows research vessel, Filipino scientists wary
  • Neil Francis sacked as Irish Independent pundit following Marcus Smith comment
  • Filipino dictator's son loses 1 of 3 votes on elections bid
  • APNORC poll: More Americans believe antiAsian hate rising
  • Filipina crowned at world’s largest & most popular transgender pageant
  • Anchorage police investigated in White Privilege card photo
  • Filipino activists want Marcos son out of presidential race
  • Raducanu and Fernandez bid for teenage dream US Open win
  • The Sopranos and Casino actor Vinny Vella dies, aged 72
  • Caesars set to buy William Hill for £2.9bn
  • Filipino journalist shot dead while watching TV in store
  • Asian shares mostly fall as rate hikes, China slowdown loom
  • Facebook, Google, Twitter face grilling by UK lawmakers
  • Jimmy O. Yang's Crab Club feasts on Asian American stories
  • NJ man charged in $1.7M theft of armored car outside casino
  • As virus mutes Dubai nightlife, Filipino bands feel the pain
  • Australia says China threatened plane over South China Sea
  • Cargo ship splits in two after running aground in Japan port
  • Marcos redux? Dictator's son may win Philippine presidency
  • 7.1 magnitude earthquake strikes northern Philippines, says USGS
  • Virus leads two prime Atlantic City restaurants to close
  • Virus leads two prime Atlantic City restaurants to close
  • Gambling firm 32Red fined £2m for giving VIP status to problem gambler
  • Kathy Flores, women's rugby legend as player and coach, dies
  • How gambling addiction has taken hold of women in the UK
  • Virus leads two prime Atlantic City restaurants to close
  • Gambling firm 32Red fined £2m for giving VIP status to problem gambler
  • Court considers whether US can seize a Russian yacht in Fiji
  • Jump in counties required to provide language help to voters
  • Comic, Netflix staple Jo Koy talks race, rejection in memoir
  • Court considers whether US can seize a Russian yacht in Fiji
  • Head of US Marines vows to bolster defense in southern Japan
  • Dictator’s son Bongbong Marcos wins election ‘by a landslide’
  • Anchorage police investigated in White Privilege card photo
  • Japan, Italy to lift defense ties amid China, Russia worries
  • Duterte hits Putin: I kill criminals, not children, elders
  • 7.1 magnitude earthquake in Philippines kills at least four people
  • Carl Icahn nixes charity bid to blow up exTrump casino
  • Asian chiligarlic sauce punches up pork burgers for July 4
  • KPop singer sentenced to three years in prison over sex scandal
  • Biden looks to nudge ASEAN leaders to speak out on Russia
  • Gambling addict teacher who killed himself was ‘abused by parasites’
  • Gambling firm Betway hit with record £11.6m fine
  • Gambling firms must fund addiction research and treatment, say experts
  • Live updates | Philippines leader rebukes Putin for killings
  • 2 in Seattle, San Francisco face antiAsian hate charges
  • William Hill to close 700 shops, putting 4,500 jobs at risk

RECOMMEND

  • PeraPlay.NET
  • PeraPlay.NET MAX
  • PeraPlay.ORG
  • PeraPlay.ORG MAX
  • PeraPlay Ads
  • PeraPlay Blog
  • Baidu Filipino
  • Google Filipino
  • FIFA 2022 NEWS
  • World Cup News
  • Filipino Football
  • NBA 2022 NEWS
  • PBA 2022 NEWS
  • Filipino Basketball
  • Bets IPTools
  • 1stekBet
  • 1xBet
  • 20Bet
  • 22Bet
  • 888Casino
  • Astekbet
  • BK8
  • Bcasino
  • BetOnline
  • ICECasino
  • MANSION
  • MEGASlot
  • MELBet
  • MyBookie
  • PNXBet
  • ShangriLa
  • Wazamba
  • YoniBet
  • BitStarz
  • Filipino
  • Philippines
  • PHP
  • Manila
  • Passy
  • Cebu
  • Clark
  • Baguio
  • Quezon
  • Makati
  • Abra
  • Agusan del Norte
  • Agusan del Sur
  • Aklan
  • Albay
  • Antique
  • Apayao
  • Aurora
  • Basilan
  • Bataan
  • Batanes
  • Batangas
  • Benguet
  • Biliran
  • Bohol
  • Bukidnon
  • Bulacan
  • Cagayan
  • Camarines Norte
  • Camarines Sur
  • Camiguin
  • Capiz
  • Catanduanes
  • Cavite
  • Cebu
  • Cotabato
  • Davao Occidental
  • Davao Oriental
  • Davao de Oro
  • Davao del Norte
  • Davao del Sur
  • Dinagat Islands
  • Eastern Samar
  • Guimaras
  • Ifugao
  • Ilocos Norte
  • Ilocos Sur
  • Iloilo
  • Isabela
  • Kalinga
  • La Union
  • Laguna
  • Lanao del Norte
  • Lanao del Sur
  • Leyte
  • Maguindanao
  • Marinduque
  • Masbate
  • Metro Manila
  • Misamis Occidental
  • Misamis Oriental
  • Mountain Province
  • Negros Occidental
  • Negros Oriental
  • Northern Samar
  • Nueva Ecija
  • Nueva Vizcaya
  • Occidental Mindoro
  • Oriental Mindoro
  • Palawan
  • Pampanga
  • Pangasinan
  • Quezon
  • Quirino
  • Rizal
  • Romblon
  • Samar
  • Sarangani
  • Siquijor
  • Sorsogon
  • South Cotabato
  • Southern Leyte
  • Sultan Kudarat
  • Sulu
  • Surigao del Norte
  • Surigao del Sur
  • Tarlac
  • Tawi-Tawi
  • Zambales
  • Zamboanga Sibugay
  • Zamboanga del Norte
  • Zamboanga del Sur
  • Gambling
  • Gaming
  • Game
  • Casino
  • Slot
  • Lottery
  • Mahjong
  • Baccarat
  • Blackjack
  • Roulette
  • Table Card
  • City of Dream
  • Solaire
  • Okada
  • FIFA 2022 Football
  • Football Betting Filipino
  • NBA 2022 Basketball
  • Basketball Betting Filipino
  • Online Betting
  • Filipino Online Sprotsbook
  • Filipino Online Casino
  • Free Tagalog Lessons Online
  • Baidu Filipino
  • Gambling in the Philippines
  • Online Betting Philippines
  • Filipino Bets
  • Baidu Filipino
  • Facebook
Copyright (C) Filipinos Life 2008-2022 | Feedback