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Climate & Ecology

v1.3March 2026

The Law of Equalization offers a new perspective on climate phenomena — not primarily as "warming," but as energy supersaturation with redistribution.


Climate Change = Energy Supersaturation

The conventional view focuses on temperature rise. The Law of Equalization sees this more comprehensively: the Earth system receives more energy than it can release → overloading → the system attempts to equalize.

Manifestations of equalization: Polar ice melt = energy redistribution (ice cannot sustain overloading → Variant 3 at the molecular level). Extreme weather = abrupt equalization processes. Ocean current changes = energy redistribution in water masses.


Weather as Energy Equalization

Every weather phenomenon is an equalization process:

Wind = pressure equalization. Areas with different energy densities → energy flows from high to low → air movement.

Rain = energy redistribution. Water evaporates (energy absorption), rises, cools (energy release), condenses, falls.

Thunderstorm = abrupt equalization under supersaturation. Electrical charge = massive energy differential → lightning = forced equalization.

Seasons = cyclic energy distribution due to Earth's inclination relative to the sun.


Ecological Balance

Ecosystems are nested energy equalization systems: individual ↔ population ↔ ecosystem ↔ biosphere. Each level presses on the one below (as with system nesting).

Species extinction = when a subsystem falls out of balance, the superordinate system must compensate → chain reaction.

Biodiversity = many different subsystems enable more flexible equalization (more Variant 4 options).


Consequences

The focus should not be solely on temperature, but on the total energy budget of the Earth system. Reduce energy surplus + maintain the equalization capacity of the system (forests, oceans, ice) = keeping the "sponge" large.


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