scholarly journals Social Contagion in Veganville

Author(s):  
Thomas Elliot

Abstract Meeting the 1.5°C commitment will mean the per capita emissions need to come down to 2.6 tonnes by 2030. Epidemiological contagion modelling principles are applied to transfer of trending climate conscious food choices. This research applies social contagion theory to explore “reproduction values” and “recovery rates” of vegan diets that have potential to facilitate a climate social tipping point to meet Paris Agreement targets by 2030.

Author(s):  
XINRU LI ◽  
XUEMEI JIANG ◽  
YAN XIA

Focusing on the mitigation responsibilities and efforts, this paper provides a unified estimation of allowable emission quotas for a number of Asian economies to limit the global temperature rise well below 2°C based on a range of effort-sharing approaches. The study also explores the inconsistency between their planned emission pathways under the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and the allowable emissions to achieve the 2°C target. The results show that most of the Asian developing economies would be in favor of the Equal-Per-Capita and Grandfather criteria, for which they would obtain more allowable emissions quota. However, even with the most favorable criterion, official mitigation pledges represented by NDCs are far less enough for these developing Asian economies such as China, India, Vietnam, Thailand and Pakistan, as their emission pathways under NDCs significantly exceed the ideal pathways under all effort-sharing approaches. In contrast, most of the Asian developed economies have already planned reductions of annual CO2 emissions under NDCs, in line with their ideal pathways under the most favorable effort-sharing approach. However, their reductions of emissions require deep strengthening of deployment in low-carbon, zero-carbon and negative-carbon techniques, given the current growing trend of emissions for these economies.


Author(s):  
Alix Dietzel

The Introduction sets out the main aims of the book: make sense of the lack of proper response to climate change – focusing on what has gone wrong, what has gone right, and what might change now that the Paris Agreement has been ratified. After this has been set out, the Introduction provides a brief overview of the climate change problem. Next, the Introduction defends the use of a cosmopolitan approach and comments on existing cosmopolitan research, to explain how this book relates to and contributes to current work on the subject. Finally, the Introduction outlines what is to come in the remainder of the book.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Gore

The world’s richest 1% are set to have per capita consumption emissions in 2030 that are still 30 times higher than the global per capita level compatible with the 1.5⁰C goal of the Paris Agreement, while the footprints of the poorest half of the world population are set to remain several times below that level. By 2030, the richest 1% are on course for an even greater share of total global emissions than when the Paris Agreement was signed. Tackling extreme inequality and targeting the excessive emissions linked to the consumption and investments of the world’s richest people is vital to keeping the 1.5⁰C Paris goal alive.


Nanomedicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vuk Uskoković

The most effective COVID-19 vaccines, to date, utilize nanotechnology to deliver immunostimulatory mRNA. However, their high cost equates to low affordability. Total nano-vaccine purchases per capita and their proportion within the total vaccine lots have increased directly with the GDP per capita of countries. While three out of four COVID-19 vaccines procured by wealthy countries by the end of 2020 were nano-vaccines, this amounted to only one in ten for middle-income countries and nil for the low-income countries. Meanwhile, economic gains of saving lives with nano-vaccines in USA translate to large costs in middle-/low-income countries. It is discussed how nanomedicine can contribute to shrinking this gap between rich and poor instead of becoming an exquisite technology for the privileged. Two basic routes are outlined: (1) the use of qualitative contextual analyses to endorse R&D that positively affects the sociocultural climate; (2) challenging the commercial, competitive realities wherein scientific innovation of the day operates.


Subject Prospects for renewable energy in 2017. Significance The United States and China, the world’s two largest economies as well as the largest carbon emitters, announced their ratification of the Paris Agreement in September. Earlier this year, prices for renewable energy in select regions set historic lows below fossil-fired plants. Renewable energy seems to have passed the tipping point towards gradual adoption as the primary source of electric power while also hopefully preventing catastrophic climate change.


2008 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan A van Gils ◽  
Casper Kraan ◽  
Anne Dekinga ◽  
Anita Koolhaas ◽  
Jan Drent ◽  
...  

Optimality reasoning from behavioural ecology can be used as a tool to infer how animals perceive their environment. Using optimality principles in a ‘reversed manner’ may enable ecologists to predict changes in population size before such changes actually happen. Here we show that a behavioural anti-predation trait (burrowing depth) of the marine bivalve Macoma balthica can be used as an indicator of the change in population size over the year to come. The per capita population growth rate between years t and t +1 correlated strongly with the proportion of individuals living in the dangerous top 4 cm layer of the sediment in year t : the more individuals in the top layer, the steeper the population decline. This is consistent with the prediction based on optimal foraging theory that animals with poor prospects should accept greater risks of predation. This study is among the first to document fitness forecasting in animals.


Nature ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 481 (7381) ◽  
pp. 357-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annelies J. Veraart ◽  
Elisabeth J. Faassen ◽  
Vasilis Dakos ◽  
Egbert H. van Nes ◽  
Miquel Lürling ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
SK. Shareef ◽  
S. N. Dash ◽  
M. Satish Kumar

Solid waste is the most influencing parameter in the day to day life of human existence on the earth as the quantity that is generating per capita per day is increasing significantly year by year along with the improved life style which becomes more problematic issue in the days to come if it is not handled properly. Earlier environment used to focus with respect to the pollution like air pollution and water pollution where majority of the people used encounter but now a day’s in the urban areas solid waste disposal without any consequences on the environment is a challenging issue to concern administrative authorities why because even to provide shelter along with basic needs like water, clean air etc is a burden to them in addition to them the solid waste becomes highly considerable issue by keeping view of development of the area, that is why in all most all the areas of the world especially in urban areas where the population has been increasing at an rapid uncontrollable number it is imposing heavy burden to find out suitable solution for dealing with solid waste Rapid industrialization is one of the major issue to be considered as part of solid waste at one side the industrialization is highly mandatory and most important domain for the development of any country but at the other side it attracts large number of people to migrate from their living areas in the name of employment to urban areas which is the high priority issue with respect to the generation of per capita solid waste from their daily day to day activities that leads to undesirable consequences on environment if they are not handled properly. At most of the cities and the towns it is being observed that the solid waste is dumping at the outskirts without proper treatment which leads to other inevitable issues especially during rainy season the chemicals from the leachate of the waste percolated into the groundwater aquifers and makes the problem more severe. It is observing that from different studies almost 80 percent of the solid waste can be recycled by adopting suitable and sophisticated methodology .In this study we have selected four municipalities comes under capital region of newly formed Andhra Pradesh waste we have collected the solid waste and segregated all recyclable waste materials than analyzed organic waste materials and proposed an effective methodology for optimum utilization of organic wastes for the welfare of the society and also to the environment.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (17) ◽  
pp. 3145-3150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Campos Araujo ◽  
Diana Barbosa Cunha ◽  
Ilana Nogueira Bezerra ◽  
Maria Beatriz Trindade de Castro ◽  
Rosely Sichieri

AbstractObjectiveTo evaluate the quality of food choices according to adolescent individual earnings in Brazil.DesignAdolescents were classified according to their individual earnings as having or not having spending power for their own expenses. Food records from two non-consecutive days of the Brazilian National Dietary Survey (NDS 2008–2009) were used to estimate food intake. Quality of food choices was based on two approaches: (i) the NOVA classification, which classifies processed and ultra-processed foods and drinks as unhealthy food groups; and (ii) traditional classification, with beans, milk, fruits and vegetables as healthy food groups, and soft drinks, sweets, snacks and crackers classified as unhealthy. We compared mean food intake (g/kJ or ml/kJ) according to per capita household income (tertiles) and adolescent individual earnings, with adolescent earnings adjusted for household income, using multiple linear regression.SettingBrazilian households (n 13 569).SubjectsAdolescents aged 14–18 years (n 3673).ResultsMales without individual earnings had higher per capita household income than those with individual earnings. Household income was associated with all three food groups of the NOVA classification and seven of the eight groups of the traditional classification. However, only beans and snacks were consumed in significantly greater quantities by adolescents with individual earnings compared with those without earnings.ConclusionsAdolescent individual earnings were not the main driver of food choices; however, per capita household income was associated with food choices. The consumption of both healthy and unhealthy items increased with increasing household income.


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