Try GOLD - Free
HOW DID HUMANS GET TO THE BRINK OF CRASHING CLIMATE?
AppleMagazine
|December 01, 2023
Amidst record-high temperatures, deluges, droughts and wildfires, leaders are convening for another round of United Nations climate talks later this month that seek to curb the centuries-long trend of humans spewing ever more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
-
For hundreds of years, people have shaped the world around them for their benefit: They drained lakes to protect infrastructure, wealth and people. They dug up billions of tons of coal, and then oil and gas, to fuel empires and economies. The allure of exploiting nature and burning fossil fuels as a path to prosperity hopped from nation to nation, each eager to secure their own energy.
People who claimed the power to control nature and the energy resources around them saw the environment as a tool to be used for progress, historians say. Over hundreds of years, that impulse has remade the planet’s climate, too — and brought its inhabitants to the brink of catastrophe.
CONTROLLING THE ENVIRONMENT
Mexico City traces its roots to a settlement centuries ago on islands in the midst of Lake Texcoco. These days, most of the lake is gone, drained long ago to make room for the building and growth that today has more than 22 million people sprawling toward the edges of the Valley of Mexico.
Getting water in the arid valley — a need that has spiked as droughts have worsened — relies on pumping from deep underground. The toll of centuries of such pumping can be seen in curbs that crumble and structures that tilt atop the resulting subsidence, with some areas sinking around 30 centimeters (11.8 inches) a year. At the same time, neighborhoods are at increased risk of severe flooding because of climate change-fueled extreme rain events and drainage systems that are less effective because of the subsidence.
This story is from the December 01, 2023 edition of AppleMagazine.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM AppleMagazine
AppleMagazine
OPENAI RAISES $122 BILLION AS AI INFRASTRUCTURE RACE ACCELERATES
OpenAI has raised $122 billion in a new funding round that values the artificial intelligence company at approximately $852 billion, underscoring the scale of capital now flowing into AI infrastructure.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
UBER BETS ON AMAZON'S CUSTOM CHIPS TO BOOST AI EFFORTS
Uber is turning to Amazon's custom-designed silicon to accelerate its artificial intelligence ambitions, deepening its cloud relationship with Amazon Web Services as demand for advanced compute continues to climb.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
MAC MINI AND MAC STUDIO FACE EXTREME SHIPPING DELAYS AMID GLOBAL RAM SHORTAGE
Apple customers attempting to configure higher-memory versions of the Mac mini and Mac Studio are encountering unusually long delivery timelines, with shipping estimates in the United States stretching as far as four to five months for certain builds.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
ALIBABA DEPLOYS 10,000 IN-HOUSE ZHENWU AI CHIPS TO CHALLENGE NVIDIA
Alibaba has deployed 10,000 of its self-developed Zhenwu artificial intelligence chips in a new large-scale data center project, signaling a decisive step in China's push to reduce reliance on U.S. semiconductor technology.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
APPLE RESEARCH EXPLORES AI-ASSISTED UI PROTOTYPING AND IMAGE SAFETY RATING
Apple's artificial intelligence research teams continue to deepen their work around large language models, publishing new studies that examine how AI can assist in user interface prototyping and how image safety can be evaluated more reliably at scale.
3 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
APPLE ARCADE COULD USE AN "ALWAYS ALLOW" FEATURE SEPARATE FROM THE APP STORE
Apple Arcade has quietly become one of the most parent-friendly corners of Apple’s services lineup.
3 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
APPLE RUNS OUT OF COMPUTERS: SEVERAL MODELS UNAVAILABLE FOR MONTHS AMID COMPONENT SHORTAGE
Apple is facing extended supply constraints across parts of its Mac lineup as the global shortage of key components — particularly RAM memory — continues to ripple through the technology industry.
3 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
GEMINI IS GETTING A “PROJECTS” FEATURE TO ORGANIZE AI CHATS
Google is testing a new organizational feature for Gemini called “Projects,” designed to help users group and manage conversations more effectively.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
INTEL CONFIRMS ROLE IN ELON MUSK'S TERAFAB PROJECT
Intel has formally confirmed that it is a key partner in Elon Musk's Terafab initiative, a large-scale semiconductor manufacturing project tied to Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI.
3 mins
AppleMagazine #754
AppleMagazine
APPLE'S STUDIO DISPLAY XDR RECEIVES FDA CLEARANCE FOR MEDICAL IMAGING USE
Apple has secured U.S. Food and Drug Administration clearance for the medical imaging calibrator designed for its Studio Display XDR, marking a significant step into regulated clinical workflows.
2 mins
AppleMagazine #754
Translate
Change font size
