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World to hit temperature tipping point 10 years faster than forecast
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2023-08-12 at 7:22 PM UTC'Who will buy my house if they can't get insurance' | As extreme weather events multiply, home insurance providers in the US are rapidly raising rates - or quitting the business altogether - forcing many into severe financial distress.
Across the country, home insurance prices are spiking, as companies raise rates and limit coverage, responding in part to the fallout from more frequent extreme weather, which scientists attribute to climate change.
Dozens of smaller insurers have gone out of business, unable to withstand the shock of multiple billion-dollar disasters.
In states heavy hit by storms, wildfires and flooding, such as California, Florida and Louisiana, some big providers have stopped writing new policies altogether.
Companies say the upheaval reflects the huge number of claims in recent years, rising costs of repairs underlined by inflation, and growing risks in the years ahead, as climate-change induced catastrophes multiply. -
2023-08-12 at 7:38 PM UTCMaybe they should find out who the chemtrail spreaders are and e-mail them their concerns.
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2023-08-12 at 7:41 PM UTCinsurers have to pull out of extreme high-risk areas
it couldn't be due to their costs and overheads being exacerbated by the state of the economy, it must be GLOBAL WARMING -
2023-08-12 at 7:45 PM UTC
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2023-08-12 at 7:52 PM UTC
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2023-08-12 at 7:54 PM UTC
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2023-08-12 at 7:57 PM UTC
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2023-08-12 at 8:05 PM UTCThe Climate Cult.
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2023-08-14 at 5:30 AM UTC
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2023-08-14 at 5:31 AM UTC
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2023-08-14 at 1:46 PM UTCSummers lost to fire and smoke. Biblical floods. Dying forests. Retreating coasts. Economic turmoil and political unrest. It’s going to be a weird century. Here’s what it will look like—and how Canada can get through it.
This is not what our country will look like if the world fails to reduce emissions—this is our future even if we do. Everything in these pages comes from peer-reviewed scientific studies and conversations with dozens of experts in climate science, political science, history, health and economics. Some of the specifics may be hazy, but the basic picture we can divine is clear and sobering. The question facing us now is twofold: how to live in this future we’ve already created, and how to make sure it doesn’t get any worse.
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2023-08-14 at 1:50 PM UTCFolks, this month is the hottest December on record since records began
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2023-08-14 at 1:50 PM UTCBibles are flooding now?
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2023-08-14 at 10:17 PM UTCRising global temperatures flood China
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2023-08-14 at 10:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny you cant be sure of that. ita possible that the californian tectonic plate has shifted higher.
That's a very good point Vinny, seems I read the area around there does rise constantly. Well until the big one dumps it into the Pacific. Just joking but they have sensors all over CA reading it. -
2023-08-14 at 10:49 PM UTC
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2023-08-14 at 10:51 PM UTC
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2023-08-15 at 6:34 AM UTC
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2023-08-15 at 6:53 AM UTC
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2023-08-15 at 12:33 PM UTC‘Game-changer’: judge rules in favor of young activists in US climate trial | Sixteen young plaintiffs had alleged the Montana state government had violated their right to a healthy environment
Among the policies the challengers targeted was a provision in the Montana Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) barring the state from considering how its energy economy impacts climate change. This year, state lawmakers amended the provision to specifically ban the state from considering greenhouse gas emissions in environmental reviews for new energy projects.
That provision is unconstitutional, Seeley ruled.
“By prohibiting consideration of climate change, [greenhouse gas] emissions, and how additional GHG emissions will contribute to climate change or be consistent with the Montana constitution, the MEPA limitation violates plaintiffs’ right to a clean and healthful environment,” Seeley wrote.