Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Hot
All
within the last few weeks: In Greece 80 people died as fires raged in Mati, by
the coast. In Sweden, temperatures north of the Arctic Circle hit above 90
degrees as more than 40 forest fires claimed more than 62,000 acres. In
Finland, near the Russian border, forest fires have raged out of control. As a
record heat wave scorched Norway, fires raged there as well, fortunately
brought under control. A heatwave in Latvia has seen a 1,600-acre blaze roil
through in a very inaccessible spot, threatening to grow quickly. We’re used to
horrific forest fires in Australia, Canada and with its now year-round fire
season, the United States. Major out-of-control fires in have claimed lives and
homes all over the United States in July alone. Major swaths of California,
north and south, have been effectively leveled by fires that, as of this
writing, are still virtually entirely out-of-control (with firefighters and
homeowners/families among the fatalities).
Still
the right-wing climate change skeptics, most particularly in the “let business
do whatever it wants” Trump administration, deny a linkage between man’s
dumping of greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere and the floods, fires,
droughts, coastal sea rising and more intense super-storms that are plaguing virtually
every corner of the earth. But the President is touting a “strong economy” and
falling unemployment as the result of the President’s pro-business vectors,
regardless of the consequences, as complete vindication for his
anti-environmental stance. And even though there are vastly more alternative
energy jobs than those in the now-obsolete coal industry, Trump continues to
proselytize in favor of falling back to coal as a primary energy source. Nobody
wants coal anymore!!!!
“Strong
economy” is based on performance averages
and the drop in unemployment fails to address the dwindling earning power for
most Americans. Drill even slightly beneath the surface of these seemingly
powerful statistics and you can quickly a much less positive picture of the
American economy, one that should truly disturb us all. For more supporting
financial analysis, please read by July 26th The Rich Get Richer blog. That there is
virtually no dissent from the scientific community that man-induced climate
change is real and producing devastating impacts falls on deaf ears in a
fact-averse government.
Which
brings me to the single biggest impact that the Trump administration can have
over the future of the United States, one that can linger for decades and
change the basic character of this nation further from democracy to a
horrifically pro-corporation plutocracy, continuing a vector of massive
irreconcilable differences – polarization on steroids – will continue to rip us
apart. Appointments to the federal bench, and, in particular, the Supreme
Court. Today’s focus is obviously the environment, climate change, and the
Trump administration’s policy of eviscerating the Environmental Protection
Agency.
David
Savage, writing for the July 29th Los Angeles Times, brings it home:
“In its most important environmental ruling of recent decades, the Supreme
Court decided in 2007 that the greenhouse gases blamed for warming the planet
can be regulated as air pollutants under the Clean Air Act of 1990.
“It
was a pivotal opinion that opened the door for the Environmental Protection
Agency to impose new regulations on autos, power plants, manufacturers and
others, to address climate change as well as the dirty air targeted by the
original law.
“But
it came on a 5-4 vote, with Justice Anthony M. Kennedy joining the four
liberals, and over a fierce dissent by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.
“Now
as federal appellate Judge Brett Kavanaugh seeks to replace the retiring
Kennedy on the Supreme Court, Kavanaugh’s 12-year record of skepticism toward
such agency actions puts the landmark decision and other environmental
protections at risk. Environmentalists fear that if Kavanaugh joins the court,
he would vote to block anti-pollution regulations for decades, long after
President Trump has departed.
“‘He
would be a disaster for the environment,’ said Pat Gallagher, legal director
for the Sierra Club. ‘He has a disdain for regulation, particularly from the
EPA. Kennedy was the swing vote in this area. If we have to wait for Congress
to act on climate change, we are doomed.’
“While
serving on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, President
Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court has been a steady ‘no’ vote on climate
change regulations… When joined by fellow conservatives, he wrote opinions rejecting
EPA rules to limit greenhouse gases or air pollution that blows across state
lines. And when the majority upheld regulations, including limits on power
plants that pump out carbon pollution or put toxic mercury in the air,
Kavanaugh filed long dissents, usually arguing that Congress, not the EPA, is
the only body with the power to take such steps.
“‘EPA’s
well-intentioned policy objectives with respect to climate change do not on
their own authorize the agency to regulate,’ he wrote last year in a 2-1 ruling
that struck down a rule that required makers of air conditioners, refrigerators
and aerosols to phase out the use of hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs. These
chemicals are powerful producers of heat-trapping gases, emitting about 1,300
times more than carbon dioxide. Safe substitutes are now on the market, the EPA
says.”
This
is not battle of political doctrine. It is a fight for our very lives, the
sustainability of a Malthusian increase in human beings on a plant of limited
resources and clearly radically altering patterns of harsh and destructive
“natural events” that are anything but “natural.”
I’m Peter Dekom, and it unfathomable
to me how cavalier about such a massively negative attack on our very lives.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
LA Times 8/5/18: At Scripps Pier in San Diego, the surface water reached the highest temperature in 102 years of records, 78.8 degrees.
Palm Springs had its warmest July on record, with an average of 97.4 degrees. Death Valley experienced its hottest month on record, with the average temperature hitting 108.1. Park rangers said the heat was too much for some typically hardy birds that died in the broiling conditions.
Across California, the nighttime brought little relief, recording the highest minimum temperature statewide of any month since 1895, rising to 64.9.
California has been getting hotter for some time, but July was in a league of its own. The intense heat fueled fires across the state, from San Diego County to Redding, that have burned more than 1,000 homes and killed eight. It brought heat waves that overwhelmed electrical systems, leaving swaths of Los Angeles without power for days.
Moreover, the extreme conditions — capping years of trends heading in this direction — have caused scientists and policymakers to speak more openly and emphatically about what is causing this dramatic shift.
A decade ago, some scientists would warn against making broad conclusions linking an extraordinary heat wave to global warming. But the pace of heat records being broken in California in recent years is leading more scientists here to assertively link climate change to unrelenting heat that is only expected to worsen as humans continue putting greenhouse gases in the air.
“In the past, it would just be kind of once in a while — the odd year where you be really warm,” state climatologist Michael Anderson said.
But the last five years have been among the hottest in 124 years of record keeping, Anderson said.
“That’s definitely an indication that the world is warming, and things are starting to change,” said Anderson, who manages the California Department of Water Resources’ state climate program. “We’re starting to see things where it’s different. It’s setting the narrative of climate change.”
Post a Comment