23/01/2023

Did you know that?

 

2023 – UN International Year of Millets

 




The United Nations (UN) has declared 2023 the International Year of Millets to raise awareness of the crop's climate-resilience and nutritional benefits.

 

What Are Millets?

Millets are a group of grasses grown as grain crops, such as finger millet (eleusine coracana) and pearl millet (pennisetum glaucum). Millets are grown in more than 130 countries, mainly in Asia and Africa; the main producers are India, Nigeria, and China.

 

Easy Growing, Cheap, and Effective

Millets need less water than other grains and grow without regular irrigation, even in droughts. They grow in poor soils with little to no additional work. This makes millets cheap and easy to plant, grow, and harvest—especially in dry areas where people traditionally struggle to grow crops.

 

Excellent Gluten-Free Nutrition

Easy and widespread growing is not the only reason why millets are a “super crop:” They also contain more protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals than wheat and rice. Additionally, millets are rich in calcium and magnesium.

 

They can feed people without creating a nutritional deficiency and can also help fight health challenges such as obesity and diabetes, as they are gluten-free and have less effect on blood glucose levels.

 

Self-Sufficiency In a Changing Climate

The UN International Year of Millets (IYM) is an opportunity to “raise awareness of and direct policy attention to the nutritional and health benefits of millets and their suitability for cultivation under adverse and changing climatic conditions,” according to the UN. The UN also aims to promote “the sustainable production of millets while highlighting their potential to provide new sustainable market opportunities for producers and consumers.”

 

Millets are grown in more than 130 countries, mainly in Asia and Africa; the main producers are India, Nigeria, and China.

 

The Government of India sponsored the proposal for International Year of Millets (IYM) 2023 which was accepted by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA)

  

Millets

Millet is a common term for categorising small-seeded grasses that are often called Nutri-cereals. Some of them are sorghum (jowar), pearl millet (bajra), finger millet (ragi), little millet (kutki), foxtail millet (kakun), proso millet (cheena), barnyard millet (sawa), and kodo millet (kodon). An essential staple cereal crop for millions of smallholder dryland farmers across Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, millets offer nutrition, resilience, income and livelihood for farmers, and have multiple uses such as food, feed, fodder, biofuels and brewing.

 

 

Significance and benefits of millets

Millets are nutritionally superior to wheat and rice owing to their higher protein levels and a more balanced amino acid profile. Millets also contain various phytochemicals which exert therapeutic properties owing to their anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties. Further, besides being climate resilient, millet grains are rich sources of nutrients like carbohydrates, protein, dietary fibre, and good quality fat; minerals like calcium, potassium, magnesium, iron, manganese, zinc and B complex vitamins. Most importantly, millet production is not dependent on the use of chemical fertilizers.

 

 

Published On January 2nd, 2023

 

Sources/Links:

https://currentaffairs.adda247.com/international-year-of-millets-2023/

https://www.timeanddate.com/year/2023/millets.html

 

https://www.netmeds.com/health-library/post/kodo-millet-nutrition-health-benefits-ayurvedic-uses-and-recipes

 &:

https://vaqueirinhorepublic.blogspot.com/2022/10/ancient-grain.html


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20/01/2023

no way

 



este ano os portugueses elegeram o Eucalipto de Contige, levando a UNAC a questionar se “existe uma nova geração na opinião pública para a qual o eucalipto é encarado em pé de igualdade com as restantes árvores, sendo a sua beleza e porte alvo de atenção, justificando que há espaço para todos”. “A inclusão também chegou à floresta”, remata a entidade que promove a iniciativa. levando a UNAC a questionar se “existe uma nova geração na opinião pública para a qual o eucalipto é encarado em pé de igualdade com as restantes árvores, sendo a sua beleza e porte alvo de atenção, justificando que há espaço para todos”. “A inclusão também chegou à floresta”, remata a entidade que promove a iniciativa.

 

this year the Portuguese elected the Eucalyptus of Contige, leading UNAC to question whether "there is a new generation in public opinion for which eucalyptus is faced on an equal footing with the other trees, being its beauty and size the target of attention, justifying that there is room for all". "Inclusion has also reached the forest," concludes the entity that promotes the initiative. leading UNAC to question whether "there is a new generation in public opinion for which eucalyptus is faced on an equal footing with the other trees, being its beauty and size the target of attention, justifying that there is room for all". "Inclusion has also reached the forest," concludes the entity that promotes the initiative.

 

Sources/Links:

https://www.gazetarural.com/navigator-felicita-eucalipto-de-contige-vencedor-da-arvore-do-ano/

https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contige


18/01/2023

FISE - Forest Information System for Europe


FISE - Forest Information System for Europe is a forest knowledge base in support of the EU Forest Strategy.



  

Forest tree cover is basic for sustainability assessments.

 

Measuring forest tree cover helps tracking changes, both gain and losses and supports policies related to reforestation, afforestation and ecosystem restoration.

 

Follow the Link bellow and you will find the information available regarding:  


▶ FOREST TREE COVER MAKES UP

 

37.13%

3 387 625 ha of the total country area

 

▶ FOREST PER CAPITA

 

0.33

ha per capita

 

▶ FOREST COVER CHANGE


▶ LAND COVER STATISTICS

 

▶ GROWING STOCK

 

▶ ROUNDWOOD REMOVALS

 

▶ FOREST PATCH DISTRIBUTION

 


 
 

Sources/Links:

https://forest.eea.europa.eu/countries/portugal/portugal-basic-data

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16/01/2023

The Sixth Mass Extinction Event

 


Sixth Mass Extinction of Wildlife Accelerating - Study


According to a recent analysis, the sixth mass extinction of wildlife on Earth is accelerating. More than 500 species of land animals are on the brink of extinction and are likely to be lost within 20 years; the same number were lost over the whole of the last century. The scientists say that without the human destruction of nature, this rate of loss would have taken thousands of years and they warn that this may be a tipping point for the collapse of civilisation.

 

The analysis, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, looked at data on 29,000 land vertebrate species compiled by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species and BirdLife International. The scientists identified 515 species with populations below 1,000 and about half of these had fewer than 250 individuals remaining.

 

 

What is a Mass Extinction Event?

 

A mass extinction is usually defined as a loss of about three quarters of all species in existence across the entire Earth over a “short” geological period of time. Given the vast amount of time since life first evolved on the planet, “short” is defined as anything less than 2.8 million years.

(…)

Previous Mass Extinction Events

(…)

The Analysis

(…)

Causes

(…)

Consequences of the Sixth Mass Extinction

(…)

 

You Might Also Like:

 

Vertebrates on the brink as indicators of biological annihilation and the sixth mass extinction

 

 

Sources/Links:

https://earth.org/sixth-mass-extinction-of-wildlife-accelerating/

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1922686117

https://www.iucnredlist.org/ 

https://earth.org/conservation/

https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/jrc-news/ecosystems-might-lose-27-vertebrate-diversity-2100-2022-12-16_en

 

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08/01/2023

Calls to implement Basic Climate Law

The environmental association Zero has warned of the need for rapid implementation and regulation of the Basic Climate Law.

 


 Published a year ago and coming into force on February 1st, the Law includes measures that must be implemented and presented by the Government within one year after the entry into force of the law, that is, a period that ends within practically a month, to implement, such as the planned availability to the public of a digital tool, the Climate Action Portal, which will allow citizens to participate in climate action and access information on emissions and targets, progress in achieving them, or climate finance. “Public participation occupies a central place in the law (…), however, it is not clear how this participation will be framed”.

 

In a statement, Zero mentions measures that it considers urgent to implement, such as the planned availability to the public of a digital tool, the Climate Action Portal, which will allow citizens to participate in climate action and access information on emissions and targets, progress in achieving them, or climate finance. “Public participation occupies a central place in the law (…), however, it is not clear how this participation will be framed”.

 

A year after the publication of the law, figures are missing for carbon budgets for the period 2023-2025, says Zero, adding that by February the initial climate impact assessment report should be presented, in which potential government diplomas are identified.

 

 

Sources/Links:

https://www.theportugalnews.com/news/2023-01-01/calls-to-implement-basic-climate-law/73444 

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31/12/2022

the close of 2022


 on the last day of 2022 we wish you a Happy 


"May the Force be with you"

21/12/2022

Winter solstice in 2022

 

When is the winter solstice in 2022?


The winter solstice is on Wednesday 21 December 2022. It marks the first day of astronomical winter, and the precise time of the solstice will be at 9:47pm GMT. This differs from meteorological winter, which always begins on 1 December, every year.

 

There are two solstices every year, one in December and one in June.

 

What is the winter solstice?

The winter solstice is when the Sun reaches its lowest point in the sky, and here in the northern hemisphere, that results in the shortest day of the year. It’s not something that you can see, like a meteor shower or planet in opposition, but rather an event that occurs.

 

During the winter solstice, the northern hemisphere is tilted furthest away from the Sun, causing it to reach its lowest point visually in the sky. For us here on Earth, this means it takes the least amount of time to cross the sky, and so we get the shortest day (and longest night) of the year. After the winter solstice, the days begin to get longer and the nights shorter.

 

What does the word ‘solstice’ mean?

The word ‘solstice’ is the scientific term for this astronomical event that happens twice a year. The word solstice is derived from the Latin sol (sun) and sistere (to stand still). Both at the December solstice and the June solstice, the Sun reverses its apparent annual north-south motion and appears to stand still.

 

How the December solstice affects the poles

The Arctic and Antarctic circles are located at 66.5 degrees north and 66.5 degrees south, respectively. The latitude of the Arctic circle is essentially the line, above which the Sun never rises on the December solstice, resulting in 24 hours of darkness.



As you move closer towards the north pole, you’re moving closer towards the point on the Earth that is tilted furthest away from the Sun. The winter solstice is the darkest time of the year for the north pole, and during these winter months, the Sun doesn’t rise from mid-November to late January, buffered by a period of twilight on either side.

    

Sources/Links:

https://www.sciencefocus.com/planet-earth/winter-solstice-shortest-day-year/

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20/12/2022

A Massive Global Reforestation Project Is How We Fix Climate Change


This guy has a way with arithmetic’s...



We can conclusively solve our climate change problem with a massive global reforestation campaign. This piece is a quick 2-minute summary

 

Here is how:

 

First, the basic unit of CO2 is a “ton.” A billion tons is a gigaton. Each year, the world emits about 45 billion tons, or 45 gigatons of CO2.

 

We know that forests absorb CO2. How much? An acre of forest absorbs about 15 tons of CO2 in a year. Other tree species absorb somewhat more or less, some of them a lot more.

 

This means we need 3 billion acres of forest to offset our entire worldwide CO2 emissions each year.

 

Does the world have this much land for new forest?

 

Yes, but we will need to regreen deserts. There are about 4.7 billion acres of desert available, and we’ll only need about 3 billion of that. People have been successfully regreening deserts for decades, e.g. in China, Jordan, UAE, and Israel.

 

The limiting factor to regreening a desert is irrigation. We have to irrigate the trees for about 20 years until the vegetation changes the climate and induces its own rainfall.

 

We cannot rely on existing freshwater supplies, as they are all spoken for (food, agriculture, etc), so the only other source is desalination of seawater. This is energy-intensive, so our energy sources need to be low or zero-carbon —solar, for instance.

 

On a per-acre basis, the cost to build a solar array sufficient to power the desalination needed to irrigate that acre of forest for 20 years is about $1000/year per acre.

 

Thus, to reforest 3 billion acres at current prices will cost the world an investment of $3 trillion/year for 20 years.

 

That sounds like a lot, but the world GDP of 2017 was $80 trillion.

 

Therefore, this plan would require an investment of a little less than 4% of world GDP every year for 20 years. Combined with even moderate and gradual reduction in fuel emissions, we would effectively offset all CO2 emissions within 20 years once the forests reach maturity.

 

If we were to reforest the remaining 1.7 billion acres, the excess sequestration capacity would remove all of the CO2 remaining in the atmosphere that we have emitted since 1750 (beginning of the Industrial Revolution) in under 35 years.


Sources/Links:

https://medium.com/@yishan/a-massive-global-reforestation-project-is-how-we-fix-climate-change-e37fa24436a3

https://medium.com/@yishan/a-massive-global-reforestation-project-is-%20-we-fix-climate-change-36afc6d4dc2

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Satellite Pollution

  Fontes/Links: https://www.slingshot.space/news/state-of-satellite-deployments-and-orbital-operations-2023 https://www.sciencefocus.com/spa...