The federal Liberals are seeing a dive in popularity among younger voters, once the core of their base, falling 23 points behind the Conservatives by the end of August, according to new polling from Nanos Research.
New note by stevem
Some of the people living through these extreme climate events will be covered by insurance — but that will soon be priced out of reach for average homeowners.
While the corporations rake in billions in profit, the marginally poor, and their dependence on ecosystem services, will be left without government support. Canada will be letting many of these become climate refugees, in the same provinces they’ve lived for years.
Here, in Alberta, farmers are struggling to grow crops. Our main source of water, which is fed from the glaciers, is at the lowest point it has ever been.
Will the dying, matter?
New note by stevem
Capacity for dogs hits limit at city animal shelter
The true cost of climate pollution? 44% of corporate profits
The true cost of climate pollution? 44% of corporate profits
What if companies had to pay for the problems their carbon emissions cause? Their profits would plunge, according to new estimates, possibly wiping out trillions in financial gains.
These results, spelled out in a recent study in the journal Science, are based on analysis of almost 15,000 publicly-traded companies around the world. To calculate how much each ton of carbon emissions ends up costing society, economists used the Environmental Protection Agency’s estimate of $190 per ton.
For all of those companies combined, the damage would run into the trillions of dollars, Christian Leuz, a coauthor of the study and a business professor at the University of Chicago, told the Associated Press. The researchers only included direct emissions from companies, not “downstream” emissions related to the products they sell. (So emissions from the operations needed to build cars would count; the pollution that comes out of its tailpipe wouldn’t.)
But even as the toll of carbon emissions becomes apparent, governments around the world are pouring more money into support for fossil fuel companies than ever before. Last year, subsidies for oil, coal, and natural gas reached a record high of $7 trillion, according to a report out Thursday from the International Monetary Fund, which works out to $13 million every minute. |Read more https://grist.org/economics/true-cost-carbon-pollution-half-of-corporate-profits-climate/|
#ClimateChange #Cost #environment #world #cdnpoli #politics #emissions