Jancovici : "Le monde à +3°C arrive plus vite que prévu"

In this video, Jean-Marc Jancovici bluntly states that the 1.5°C and 2°C climate targets are dead, debunks the myth of corporate carbon neutrality—an accounting error that stifles internal creativity—and explains why political instability in Europe has a single root cause that no one is naming. He also reveals why it is psychologically impossible to mobilize against a danger we have never experienced and why no film will ever truly be able to depict what a world at +3°C will be like. 👉 On the agenda: climate targets, 1.5°C, 2°C, carbon neutrality, carbon offsetting, political instability, Europe, energy, degrowth, IPCC, CO2, businesses, management. 💡 Key points covered: The 1.5°C target is dead, and so is 2°C: Jancovici clearly states this. To maintain a 2°C temperature increase, we would need an additional COVID-19 case every year; we are light-years away from that. Why our brains cannot mobilize against a danger we have never experienced. Why even four times the budget of the Titanic wouldn't be enough to create a world at +3°C. Corporate carbon neutrality is an accounting error: a simple explanation. Why carbon offsetting numbs all employees of a company. Political instability in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, and Sweden: the same root cause. Real economic activity in Europe hasn't recovered for 15 years because of energy. Why Dubai would be uninhabitable without abundant energy. What the IPCC models will never say about our life expectancy or our freedoms. ⚠️ This video represents an original editorial transformation providing real added value: Selection of key passages Editing and editing Reorganization of the content Summary Educational 📌 Original source: 12/2024    • Audiovisuel : comment survivre à la contra...   📌 Themes: Climate goals, 1.5°C, 2°C, carbon neutrality, carbon offsetting, political instability, Europe, energy, degrowth, IPCC, CO2, businesses, management #Jancovici #ClimateGoals #CarbonNeutrality #CarbonOffsetting #PoliticalInstability #Europe #Energy #Degrowth #IPCC #CO2 #Businesses #Management