Tag Archives: environmental

‘Biggest, baddest ship on the planet’: World’s largest cruise ship stokes environmental concerns – CNBC

  1. ‘Biggest, baddest ship on the planet’: World’s largest cruise ship stokes environmental concerns CNBC
  2. Fugitive and Unburned Methane Emissions from Ships (FUMES): Characterizing methane emissions from LNG-fueled ships using drones, helicopters, and on-board measurements International Council on Clean Transportation
  3. Lionel Messi rocks new Simpson-inspired sneakers at Royal Caribbean event Marca
  4. The World’s Largest Cruise Ship Just Started Sailing With Epic Waterslides, a 55-foot Waterfall, and More Than 40 Bars and Restaurants Travel + Leisure
  5. This cruise ship can carry nearly 10,000 people. Here’s more of what sets Icon of the Seas apart CNN

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Environmental stress rather than genetics influenced height differences in early Neolithic people: Study – Phys.org

  1. Environmental stress rather than genetics influenced height differences in early Neolithic people: Study Phys.org
  2. Cultural Practices Helped Make Women Shorter than Men in Neolithic Times Ancient Origins
  3. The large height difference between the sexes suggests that in northern Europe boys were fed better than girls EL PAÍS USA
  4. Socio-cultural practices may have affected sex differences in stature in Early Neolithic Europe Nature.com
  5. Differences between male and female height in Early Neolithic Europe are likely to have been driven by culture Nature.com

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Environmental stress rather than genetics influenced height differences in early Neolithic people: Study – Phys.org

  1. Environmental stress rather than genetics influenced height differences in early Neolithic people: Study Phys.org
  2. Cultural Practices Helped Make Women Shorter than Men in Neolithic Times Ancient Origins
  3. The large height difference between the sexes suggests that in northern Europe boys were fed better than girls EL PAÍS USA
  4. Socio-cultural practices may have affected sex differences in stature in Early Neolithic Europe Nature.com
  5. Differences between male and female height in Early Neolithic Europe are likely to have been driven by culture Nature.com

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Ranked: The Foods With the Largest Environmental Impact – Visual Capitalist

  1. Ranked: The Foods With the Largest Environmental Impact Visual Capitalist
  2. Can swapping beef for chicken help your diet and the planet? How many steps do we really need per day? How this health news can impact your life. Yahoo Life
  3. Small dietary changes could offset carbon emissions Earth.com
  4. Study shows simple diet swaps can cut carbon emissions and improve your health Tulane University
  5. Simple dietary substitutions can reduce carbon footprints and improve dietary quality across diverse segments of the US population Nature.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Why Bethesda Made Starfield’s Environmental Damage Easier – Kotaku

  1. Why Bethesda Made Starfield’s Environmental Damage Easier Kotaku
  2. To test Starfield, Bethesda gave the team a build that was “basically done” last year and said “this should be the game you’re playing over the holiday” Gamesradar
  3. Todd Howard says that Starfield’s ship AI sucks on purpose so players can actually hit stuff: ‘You have to make the AI really stupid’ PC Gamer
  4. “That was a pretty complex system”: Starfield Spacesuits Originally Served a Very Different Purpose in the Game FandomWire
  5. Todd Howard says exploring planets in Starfield was much more punishing before Bethesda “nerfed the hell out of it” Gamesradar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Environmental, social, governance investing an ‘undemocratic tax’ on economy, Reyes says – KSL.com

  1. Environmental, social, governance investing an ‘undemocratic tax’ on economy, Reyes says KSL.com
  2. Republican states move to block giant asset manager’s ESG push for utility companies The Hill
  3. Hearing Wrap Up: ESG Agenda Prioritizes Leftist Ideology Over the Interests of the American People – United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability House Committee on Oversight and Reform |
  4. ESG and climate change: ‘Woke capitalism’ or smart business? USA TODAY
  5. Texas Republicans take ESG battle to insurers The Hill
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Childhood Trauma Linked to Civic Environmental Engagement and Green Behavior

Summary: People who experience trauma and abuse during childhood are more likely to engage in civic environmental activities and green behaviors later in life, a new study reports.

Source: University of Colorado

Experiencing childhood trauma may lead an individual to volunteer, donate money or contact their elected officials about environmental issues later in life, according to recent research published in Scientific Reports.

The CU Boulder and Loyola University study is one of the first in the U.S. to associate childhood trauma and public, civic environmental engagement in adulthood. It also found that, in addition to people who experienced childhood trauma, those who traveled and had experiences in nature as children were also more likely to report engaging in private “green behavior” as adults, such as recycling, driving or flying less, and taking shorter showers.

“We set out to explore reasons or motivations why someone would get environmentally engaged versus not and experiencing childhood trauma emerged as a really powerful motivator,” said lead author Urooj Raja, who earned her doctorate in environmental studies at CU Boulder in 2021.

As part of Raja’s doctoral work, the researchers conducted a survey in 2020 using a nationally representative sample of about 450 U.S. adults to examine two types of environmental engagement.

Public, civic engagement was measured in hours per month devoted to an environmental protection cause, such as writing letters to elected officials or donating time and resources to an organization. Private, green behavior was defined as self-reported actions adopted by individuals or households to reduce their environmental impact.

Previous research has shown that people who experience natural disasters as children are more likely to get involved in environmental causes, but these new findings show that childhood trauma of any kind is associated with increased interest in both private and public environment engagement as an adult.

This indicates there may be something about a formative, negative experience that drives individuals to engage on a public or policy level with environmental issues, instead of only practicing green behavior.

“It suggests that there could be another way of looking at trauma,” said Raja, now an assistant professor in the School of Communication at Loyola University Chicago.

While the researchers can’t say exactly why experiencing traumatic events earlier in life boosts the likelihood of getting publicly involved in environmental issues, they note that previous research has associated trauma with a strong sense of empathy, and empathy with green behavior.

It could also partly be a coping mechanism, to attempt to keep bad things from happening to other people or living things, said Raja.

Drivers of environmental engagement

Research in this area has often examined disengagement—the reasons why people don’t act on pressing environmental issues. Raja’s team wanted to know: What drives those who do engage?

First, Raja interviewed 33 people who are highly engaged in environmental issues. She discovered that many had experienced some kind of childhood trauma.

“It emerged as a very powerful piece of why people wanted to and became engaged with environmental work,” said Raja.

Second, they gathered survey data from about 450 U.S. adults who self-reported that they spent five hours or more in the past month working on environmental issues.

They answered a series of questions about themselves, including their current civic engagement and green behavior, formative childhood experiences (gardening, swimming in a lake or going on a hike in the woods for the first time), and traumatic experiences in childhood (living in poverty or experiencing hunger, not having a safe home environment, losing a parent or sibling, dealing with health issues, or enduring sexual harassment, assault or bullying).

The data revealed that childhood experiences in nature, travel and trauma were all predictors of private, green behavior later in life. However, only childhood trauma was also significantly associated with public, civic engagement. Trauma also had the largest impact on predicting green behavior, compared to other formative life experiences.

Studies in decades past—including work by Louise Chawla, professor emerita in the Program in Environmental Design—have found a strong link between childhood travel and experiences in nature and pro-environmental attitudes and behaviors later in life. The new survey confirms that these types of childhood experiences still predict green behavior for adults today.

This indicates there may be something about a formative, negative experience that drives individuals to engage on a public or policy level with environmental issues, instead of only practicing green behavior. Image is in the public domain

“This is another data point that supports the value of creating opportunities for people to connect with nature, and the importance of those experiences for cultivating a society that protects the natural resources that we all depend on,” said Amanda Carrico, co-author of the new study and associate professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at CU Boulder.

A need for more resources and support

Carrico, who is trained as an environmental psychologist and teaches courses on climate change, has noticed that many students and professionals in the field struggle not only with the weight of their work, but also with the experiences that may have led them to it.

“It’s emotionally intense and exhausting,” said Carrico, noting that those who work on mitigating climate change are also often part of communities directly affected by its growing impacts. “You’re talking about a community of people that seem to be carrying other kinds of emotionally complex burdens.”

See also

The authors say that the findings only further emphasize the need for people engaged in public-facing or civic environmental work to have access to resources and support.

“People, in their own words, have said that we need better resources,” said Raja. “Making the link between adverse childhood experiences and the need for more resources for people that do this type of work is an important first step to making that happen.”

Funding: This work was funded by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, the Graduate School of Arts and Science, the Center to Advance Research and Training in the Social Sciences, and the Department of Environmental Studies. Publication of this article was funded by the University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Open Access Fund.

About this trauma and environmental neuroscience research news

Author: Kelsey Simpkins
Source: University of Colorado
Contact: Kelsey Simpkins – University of Colorado
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“Childhood trauma and other formative life experiences predict environmental engagement” by Urooj Raja et al. Scientific Reports


Abstract

Childhood trauma and other formative life experiences predict environmental engagement

Environmental problems continue to intensify. Yet, despite scientific consensus on threats such as climate change, broadscale public engagement with the issue is elusive. In this paper, we focus on childhood formative experiences and the extent to which they are correlated with environmental engagement.

We consider two forms of environmental engagement: civic engagement, measured in hours per month devoted to an environmental protection cause, and private-sphere green behavior.

Past studies about significant life experiences have shown that formative experiences, especially in childhood, correlate with environmentally sensitive attitudes and vocations in later life.

However, we know less about the formative life events experienced by contemporary environmentally engaged persons. Looking at a nationally representative sample of American adults (n = 449), we find that childhood trauma predicts both civic engagement and green behavior.

We also find that childhood experiences in nature and childhood travel experiences predict green behavior but not civic engagement.

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New York sued by environmental group after approval of crypto mining facility: Report

The New York Public Service Commission (PSC) was sued by environmental activists on Jan. 13 for approving the takeover of a cryptocurrency mining facility in the state.

According to The Guardian, the state Public Service Commission (PSC) is responsible for regulating public utilities, and authorized in September 2022 the conversion of the Fortistar North power plant into a crypto mining site.

The facility is located in Tonawanda, a city less than ten miles from Niagara Falls, and was set to be taken over by the Canadian crypto mining firm Digihost.

Plaintiffs claim that the approval violates New York’s climate law of 2019. The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) sets the goal of reducing 85% in statewide emissions by 2050, and zero-emissions electricity by 2040, among other targets.

In the lawsuit, the Clean Air Coalition of Western New York and the Sierra Club are represented by the non-profit Earthjustice, claiming that the Fortistar plant was only operated during periods of high demand for electricity, such as extreme weather conditions. As a crypto mining plant, however, the site would be running 24 hours a day, generating up to 3,000% more greenhouse gas emissions.

Related: 1.5M houses could be powered by the energy Texas miners returned

Activists argue that the New York state must conduct environmental reviews when examining projects.

In October 2021, a letter from a group of local business requested the state to deny the power plant conversion to a crypto mining facility, claiming that:

“Proof-of-Work cryptocurrency mining uses enormous amounts of energy to power the computers needed to conduct business — should this activity expand in New York, it could drastically undermine New York’s climate goals established under the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.”

According to public filings, Digihost planned to convert the facility to renewable natural gas to reduce its environmental impact. The company also noted that the mining site was approved by the North Tonawanda planning commission, which performs environmental reviews before making decisions.

In August, Digihost also disclosed plans to move part of its mining rigs from New York to Alabama in an effort to lower energy costs, Cointelegraph reported.

Digihost did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

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