"For those of you who are interested in statistics, this is a five-sigma event. So it's five standard deviations beyond the mean. Which means that if nothing had changed, we'd expect to see a winter like this about once every 7.5 million years.

[...]

She fears a further change in the balance could trigger a tipping point from where it's difficult to reverse the trajectory. "We might end up in a new state," she said. "That would be quite concerning to the sustainability of human conditions on Earth, I suspect.

  • BodyBySisyphus [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    If you and I went out tomorrow and threw literally every fossil fuel executive down a mineshaft, it would not change the general character of production as a whole, nor would it change the global transportation networks that are already in place and hooked on fossil fuels. Nor would it stop the generalized process of extraction, production, and pollution that drives climate change.

    Yeah but it'd make me feel better (speaking entirely hypothetically).