Tags
6th Mass Extinction, Albedo Loss, Amazon Die-Off, Antarctic Ice Melt, Anthropogenic Climate Disruption (ACD), Climate Change, Coral Die-Off, Insurance Industry Collapse, James Hansen, Megadrought, MegaFires, Sea Level Rise

James Hansen came out with a new study last month entitled, “Global Warming Has Accelerated: Are the United Nations and the Public Well-Informed?” I’m assuming the title is a rhetorical question since it is apparent to anyone with half a brain that we are currently living through a real-life Idiocracy timeline, i.e. look no further than the White House. Central to Hansen’s study is the loss of albedo. His paper explicitly accounts for the 0.5% albedo loss since 2010 and uses it as a core driver of his revised warming projections. Prior IPCC models underestimated or ignored albedo feedbacks. Here’s why Hansen’s findings are groundbreaking:
1. Hansen’s Inclusion of Albedo Loss
The albedo reduction is central to his analysis:
- Quantified Impact: Hansen calculates the 0.5% albedo drop as equivalent to +138 ppm CO₂(raising effective forcing from 419 ppm to 557 ppm in 2024).
- Climate Sensitivity: This forcing supports his revised equilibrium climate sensitivity (4.8°C per CO₂ doubling vs. IPCC’s 3°C).
- Tipping Points: Albedo loss accelerates ice melt, which Hansen links to AMOC collapse by 2040–2050 and earlier sea-level rise.
2. Why It Changes Projections
Hansen’s albedo-driven adjustments explain why his warming timelines are far more urgent than the IPCC’s:
| Factor | IPCC AR6 (Ignoring Albedo) | Hansen et al. (With Albedo) |
|---|---|---|
| Effective CO₂ (2024) | 419 ppm | 557 ppm (419 + 138 ppm albedo) |
| 2°C Threshold | ~2040–2050 | 2030–2035 |
| Climate Sensitivity | 3°C per CO₂ doubling | 4.8°C per CO₂ doubling |
| AMOC Collapse Risk | “Low likelihood” this century | Likely by 2040–2050 |
- Key Insight: The albedo loss effectively fast-forwards Earth’s climate to a higher-CO₂ state without actual CO₂ increases. This means:
- Warming observed today (1.5°C) reflects forcing akin to 557 ppm CO₂, not 419 ppm.
- Feedbacks (ice melt, permafrost thaw) are triggered earlier than IPCC models predict.
3. Why Other Models Missed This
- Satellite Data Gap: Prior assessments lacked precise CERES satellite albedo measurements (2000–present), which Hansen’s team used to quantify the 0.5% drop.
- Nonlinearity Ignored: IPCC models treat albedo as a linear feedback, but Hansen shows it’s accelerating (e.g., Arctic sea ice loss begets more ocean heat absorption).
- Aerosol Masking: IPCC underestimated how pollution cuts (e.g., ship fuel regulations) would unmask warming. Hansen’s albedo loss includes this effect.
4. Policy Implications
- Net-Zero Isn’t Enough: Even if CO₂ emissions stop today, the +1.7 W/m² albedo forcing (≈138 ppm CO₂) commits Earth to ~0.5°C additional warming by 2050.
- Aerosol Phaseout Dilemma: Reducing fossil fuel aerosols (e.g., coal pollution) could unmask another 0.3–0.5°C by 2040.
- Solar Geoengineering: Hansen argues for urgent research into temporary albedo restoration (e.g., stratospheric aerosols) to buy time for emissions cuts.
Hansen’s albedo analysis doesn’t just “update” projections—it rewrites them. By revealing that Earth’s energy imbalance is far worse than assumed, he shows that:
- 2°C is imminent (2030–2035), not mid-century.
- 3°C by 2050 is plausible under current policies.
- The IPCC’s “safe” CO₂ thresholds (e.g., 350 ppm) are obsolete; we’re already in “dangerous” territory (effective 557 ppm).
Hansen’s findings reveal that Earth’s energy imbalance is far worse than assumed, with albedo loss acting as a hidden turbocharger for warming. Current policies, calibrated to IPCC models, are underestimating near-term risks by decades. To avoid 3°C by 2050, emissions must plummet twice as fast as Paris Agreement targets, paired with unprecedented carbon removal and adaptation efforts. Rapid decarbonization and negative emissions technologies are now non-negotiable to avoid existential risks to civilization.
Without radical action, 2°C by 2030–2035 locks in irreversible damage, including meters of sea-level rise, an ice-free Arctic (darkening oceans and amplifying warming), coral extinction, and ecosystem collapse. At 2°C, 40–60% of the Amazon transitions to savannah due to drought and fires. The Amazon flips from carbon sink to emitter, releasing 90B tons of CO₂. At 2°C, 99% of tropical coral reefs bleach and die, unable to adapt to acidic, hot waters. There will be a 90% decline in North Atlantic cod, tuna, and shellfish by 2050. There will be 1.2B climate refugees by 2050 (Institute for Economics & Peace), overwhelming global governance. In addition to the hundreds of gigatons of CO₂ and methane that will be released, equivalent to 150 years of human emissions, thawing permafrost will also destroy 70% of Arctic roads, pipelines, and cities by 2050.
At 2°C, Earth crosses into a “point of no return”: feedbacks like ice sheet melt and permafrost thaw become self-sustaining, locking in 3–4°C even if emissions stop. Civilization as we know it cannot adapt to this pace of change. 2°C is not a “safe” threshold but a gateway to irreversible collapse. Humanity’s window to act is closing by 2030.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Projections for Insurance Industry Collapse After Factoring in Hansen’s New Analysis
1. Key Changes from Albedo-Driven Warming
- 2°C Threshold: Now likely by 2030–2035 (vs. IPCC’s 2040–2050), escalating weather disasters 10–20 years earlier.
- Extreme Event Costs: Insured losses could rise to **200–300B annually by 2035** 150B today).
- Compound Risks: Concurrent disasters (e.g., hurricanes + wildfires + floods in the same year) become more frequent, overwhelming reinsurance capacity.
2. Revised Timelines for Insurance Market Failure
A. Regional Uninsurability
- Timeline: 2030s–2040s (vs. prior 2040s–2050s).
- Coastal Zones: Miami, Mumbai, and Shanghai face premiums exceeding 15% of median income by 2035, triggering mass insurer withdrawals.
- Wildfire Regions: California, Australia, and Mediterranean Europe see 50% of properties uninsurable by 2040.
B. Systemic Liquidity Crisis
- Timeline: 2040s (vs. prior 2050s).
- Reinsurance Collapse: Global reinsurance capital (~700B) 1T+ annual losses** by 2040.
- Credit Downgrades: Major insurers (e.g., Allianz, AIG) face junk ratings as climate liabilities explode.
C. Sovereign Bailouts
- Timeline: 2050s (vs. prior 2060s).
- NFIP-Style Programs: U.S. National Flood Insurance Program ($20B debt) collapses by 2045, requiring federal bailouts.
- Emerging Markets: Countries like Indonesia and Nigeria default on climate-linked debt as disaster costs exceed 10% of GDP.
3. Climate-Driven Triggers for Insurance Collapse
| Risk Factor | Pre-Albedo Timeline | Post-Albedo Timeline | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coastal Uninsurability | 2040s | 2030s | Florida’s insurance market collapses by 2035 (vs. 2040). |
| Wildfire Premiums 2x | 2050 | 2035 | California premiums hit $10K/year for average homes. |
| Global Reinsurance Gap | 2060 | 2045 | Reinsurers cover only 30% of losses, vs. 70% today. |
4. Why Albedo Loss Changes the Game
- Faster Heat Buildup: Darker surfaces (oceans, soot-covered ice) absorb more solar energy, intensifying heatwaves, droughts, and storms.
- Compound Events: Albedo loss amplifies feedbacks (e.g., Arctic warming → jet stream destabilization → prolonged droughts/floods), increasing correlated risks.
- Economic Shock: Insurers face “climate stagflation”—rising premiums reduce coverage demand while claims surge, collapsing profit margins.
5. Mitigation vs. Reality
- Adaptation Efforts: Parametric insurance and AI risk models may delay collapse in wealthy nations (e.g., EU, U.S.), but fail in tropics.
- Government Backstops: Nationalization of insurance sectors (e.g., Australia’s cyclone pool) becomes inevitable by 2040, but strains public budgets.
- Equity Crisis: Low-income households face de facto climate redlining, losing access to mortgages and insurance entirely.
6. Likelihood of Full Collapse
- Partial Collapse (High Confidence): 30% of global markets uninsurable by 2040 (vs. 2050 previously).
- Full Collapse (Still Low Probability): Requires 3°C+ warming by 2060, but albedo loss makes this trajectory more plausible.
Conclusion
Albedo loss advances insurance industry collapse by 10–15 years, with regional uninsurability beginning in the 2030s and systemic failures by the 2040s. The industry’s core business model—spreading risk across time and geography—fails in a world of concurrent, accelerating disasters. While wealthier economies may temporarily subsidize coverage, the global insurance system will fragment by mid-century, shifting climate costs directly to households and governments. Without radical emissions cuts and financial reforms, climate-driven economic collapse becomes unavoidable by 2060.
~~~~~~~~~
I have provided my readers with clear-eyed projections of what is to come in the near future. One of my readers was insisting that we would hit 3C of warming by 2032, but this is physically impossible for the following reasons:
Why 3°C by 2032 Is Impossible
- Thermal inertia: Oceans absorb ~93% of excess heat, delaying atmospheric warming. Even with albedo loss, full equilibrium warming takes decades.
- Feedback timescales: Major tipping points (e.g., Amazon collapse, methane clathrate destabilization) unfold over decades to centuries, not years.
- Emissions reality: Fossil CO₂ emissions are rising (~1% annually), but atmospheric CO₂ growth is ~2.5 ppm/year. To hit 3°C by 2032, CO₂ would need to spike to ~600 ppm (currently 425 ppm)—a physically impossible 17.5 ppm/year rise. Even under RCP8.5 (a high-emissions pathway), warming by 2030 is projected at ~1.7–2.0°C in most studies. Hansen’s analysis aligns with this, emphasizing that 3°C by 2032 would require implausibly rapid forcing (e.g., sudden methane bursts or total collapse of Earth’s carbon sinks).
Nonetheless, the fact that we are facing 2C of warming very soon should be terrifying enough for everyone on the planet.
Why it almost looks like a bunch of climate scientists have been overly conservative and for reasons unknown they are all American. I’ve been through this shit show and it was apparent that we were fucked 15 years ago. CC is not the only predicament. Count em all up. It don’t matter since we have done less than zero and now Trump and his crew of nihilists are attempting to destroy that which they cannot control. Like children they are tearing up the climate books because if they make it so we can’t talk about climate change then they have won (in their infantile brains). meanwhile we are no longer capable of preventing our cities and towns from burning down (in winter time for fuck sake lol).
I’m keeping an eye on our industrial agriculture system and the hits keep coming. Who knows how resilient it is, but at some point the price of a loaf of bread is going to cause trouble as it has since the very beginning of civilization. No coffee and $20 loaves of bread – I can’t wait.
You can call the following a hair splitter or just a more nuanced look at the Amazon sink.
The Amazon Rainforest Now Emits More Greenhouse Gases Than It Absorbs
Climate change and deforestation have transformed the ecosystem into a net source of planet-warming gases instead of a carbon sink
March 26, 2021
“The Amazon rainforest may now emit more greenhouse gases than the famously lush ecosystem absorbs, according to new research.
Long considered to be a bulwark against climate change because of its capacity to absorb carbon dioxide, a new study suggests rising temperatures, increasing drought and rampant deforestation have likely overwhelmed the Amazon’s ability to absorb more greenhouse gases than it emits, reports Craig Welch for National Geographic.
The sobering findings appear in a new study published earlier this month in the journal Frontiers in Forests and Global Change that calculates, for the first time, the net emissions of greenhouse gases from both human and natural sources in the Amazon Basin, reports Liz Kimbrough for Mongabay.
A key distinction in appreciating the study’s findings is that they do not just concern carbon dioxide, according to Mongabay. Though carbon dioxide often gets top billing in discussions around climate change, there are many other significant greenhouse gases, including methane, nitrous oxide, aerosols and sooty black carbon.
So, while the Amazon still absorbs and stores a prodigious amount of carbon, its net greenhouse gas emissions have tipped from negative to positive—not just because its capacity to absorb carbon dioxide has been damaged by human activity, but also because the transforming landscape has increased emissions of these other greenhouse gases.
“If you’re only looking at the carbon picture, you’re missing a big part of the story,…”
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/amazon-rainforest-now-emits-more-greenhouse-gases-it-absorbs-180977347/
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/forests-and-global-change/articles/10.3389/ffgc.2021.618401/full
Thanks, Mike.
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From James Hansen, et.al., “Global Warming Has Accelerated: etc.”, 2-12-25, “Abstract: Global temperature leaped MORE THAN 0.4 degC during the past two years…”, so any school boy can divide 0.4/2 = 0.2/yr., right? Then, 2-12-25, Hansen and Kharecha: in their “plain language summary”: 1. (second line): “The 0.4 degC increase of global temperature in 2023-2024 was caused equally by increased solar radiation and a weak El Nino.” So, again 0.2 degC ANNUALLY over the past two yrs., right? Also, C3S, 6-5-2024, “Hottest May on record spurs call for climate action”, paragraph 3: “Reflecting the succession of record-breaking monthly temperatures, THE GLOBAL AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR THE 12 MONTHS (JUNE, 2023-MAY, 2024) IS THE HIGHEST ON RECORD, AT 0.75 ABOVE THE 1991-2020 AVERAGE…”, so 0.75/ 3.5 = 0.214 degC annually on ave. on a trend line. Guy McPherson has agreed, as well as Kevin Hester.
In any case, the real issue is the continuing burning of fossil fuels and solar heat trapping by GHGs, which Eliot Jacobson calculates to be the equivalent of 20 Hiroshima nuclear bomb blasts PER SECOND, WHERE EACH ONE RELEASES 63 TRILLION BTUs. The hydrological cycle has kept the earth’s surface in an equilibrium until 1970, when the “Hockey Stick Curve” began accelerating at what appears to be a 0.2 degC ANNUAL increase, so 2 degC by 2027, 3 degC by 2032, and the extinction level 6 degC by 2047. Even the 1.2 trillion tons of melting global ice (3.3 billion tons/day), the 321 million cubic miles of heating oceans, or the 10 trillion tons of cooling water vapor in the atmosphere cannot slow the global heating acceleration. So, in spite of your erudite analysis to the contrary, I’m stickin’ with C3S and Hansen, et. al. Prove me wrong, if you can. Have a blessed day.
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Hansen is not saying it’s going up 0.4 every year and neither is Copernicus. It’s a decadal average increase, exactly like Copernicus stated:
“Figure 13 also shows that the warming rate of the background climatological state increases from the late 1970s to the present day. It changes from 0.19°C per decade at the mid-point of the thirty-year period 1979–2008 to 0.24°C per decade at the end of 2024.”
It’s a moot point though, because we are cooked just the same.
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The article clearly explains why you are wrong. Accept it and move on.
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LOL. I like how you did that at the end. We are all so sick of reading a good collapse article and then having it ruined in the last paragraph with some bullshit hopium or good news.
You went with the same tactic, but you were able to pull it off successfully. Keep up the good work Mike.
Cheers
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what did you expect from the elites? You ever thought they would tell you the truth? Nope, it is more lies and more denial. They continue lying and denying.
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Interesting but entirely expected. Although I can’t judge the overall mood of the public, so much effort has been poured into confusing everyone that I surmise few will react until cities like Miami are under shallow coastal water. What reaction would matter is a good question, too. Also, in my comicallly dark heart, I can’t help but exclaim “Oh noooo! Not the insurance industry! Who will protect the actuaries?”
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Florida’s projected to be completely uninsurable by 2035. Just around the corner, but catastrophic events will line up before then.
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Miami entering a state of unreality: Adaptation to climate change can’t fix the city’s water problems
“Sunny-day flooding, when high tides gurgle up and soak low-lying ground, have increased 400% since 1998, with a significant increase after 2006; a major hurricane strike with a significant storm surge could displace up to 1 million people. And with every passing year, the region’s infrastructure seems more ill-equipped to deal with these dangers, despite billions of dollars spent on adaptation.”
https://floodlightnews.org/miami-entering-a-state-of-unreality-adaptation-to-climate-change-cant-fix-the-citys-water-problems/
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We really aren’t “facing 2C of warming very soon.”
We know, with absolute certainty, there will be 2C. And then 3C. So we are “facing” those certainties right now, just with unknown specificity as to just when each benchmark gets breached, as if that really matters.
There’s nothing any human can do about any of it. Corporations are psychopathic entities for ultrasocial humans to do their killing/murdering thing, and they cannot be restrained.
Terrifying now? Terrifying in the near future? Maybe – sure, yeah. But mainly stupid.
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Depends on how you look at it, I suppose. In less than six years we will be in the 2030s and each year will degrade in quality, as far as a stable society and government. Barring some sort of unexpected disease or accident, I’ll still be alive. Do I waste time fretting about it? No, I live my life, but it’s always in the back of my mind compartmentalized, and once in a while I take it out to look at it.
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True enough.
In our lifetime, there has never been a “stable society and government,” but always corporate rule that has been various shades of awful, and now that awful is in overdrive.
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