I suppose constipation is technically a form of methane sequestration, and so acts to prevent global warming. Something I'd not really considered in those terms before. Carbon sequestration gets all the attention, but those solutions are all large-scale, industrial-type endeavours. Turns out we can each do our bit with the methane. Not sure if this leads to unfortunate consequences further down the line.
carbon is not the big naughty everyone thinks
smoggy london did not have heatwaves. they had freezing
the actual impact of temperature relates to water
your human body knows evaporating water cools you down more than expiring carbon. thats why sweat is water vapour based not carbon gas based.
expelling a litre of water in sweat cools you down more than a 1 litre fart
the reason the temperature is rising is due to less water on ground.
the sahara desert is not drying up due to car emissions. but due to lack of rain.
the lack of rain is due to lack of thin layers of natural ground water because reservoirs are hoarding it. farmers dont use irrigation canals to keep their land wet. they instead use sprinklers to only release a small amount of water at specific times and only just enough to feed the plants.
water no longer collects in streams which then go down rivers feeding neighbouring land. instead it collects in sewers and shoots off straight down to the coastal water treatment plants, skipping all the land in between
take california for instance damming the rivers to create reservoirs has caused more hassle for california than car emissions ever could
take california's sultan sea
By 2014, large swaths of lake bed were exposed and salt levels drastically increased due to mandated water transfers to metropolitan areas along the coast and other factors, limiting the water inflow. Besides the resulting fish kills, the shrinking lake interrupts the bird migration, causes dust clouds, and negatively impacts local tourism.[59] During the first 15 years after the sale of the Imperial water to San Diego County, the irrigation district has been required to put water into the Salton Sea to compensate for the loss of agricultural runoff needed to replenish the sea. Since the requirement expired in 2017, the district sent a letter to the California State Water Resources Control Board in 2014 asking that the board sponsor negotiations to get the state to fulfill its obligation to stop the deterioration of the sea. Pacific Institute, an Oakland-based environmental think tank, was warning that the lack of replenishment water was leading to a "period of very rapid deterioration."[60] The rapidly shrinking sea was a "looming environmental and public health crisis".[57] With the increased shrinkage, dust storms would increase and a rotten-egg smell could reach to the coastal cities.[60]
no where does it mention car emmissions or factory emmission. its all about how much water is directed to the sea from upstream reservoirs where they cut off water when the city metropolis want water more.