Two big hurricanes hit southeastern
United States in September-October. The first was named Florence,
which devastated North and South Carolina with torrential rains, up
to 40 inches in some locations over a few days, causing massive
flooding as rivers overflowed for weeks.
The second was Michael, which hit
Florida with very high winds. Near the coast, on the east side of the
eye, sustained winds were 155 miles per hour when the storm made
landfall, which, together with the ocean storm surge, made the coast
look like it had been devastated in a bombing raid. It was the third
largest hurricane to hit the continental U.S. in history.
Michael then moved into Georgia and
then through the Carolinas before going out into the Atlantic, with
strong if diminishing winds and rain, causing great damage along its
path.
At one point, Florence had winds of
140 mph before unrelated atmospheric shear winds diminished the
hurricane winds before the storm came onto land. But then it stalled,
moving very slowly through North and South Carolina, which is why it
left the deluge of rain.
Both storms were intensified by
rising ocean temperatures in the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico
caused by global warming. Global warming also intensifies storms by
increasing the amount of water the atmosphere can hold. It also is
creating a rise in sea levels, which increases ocean surges.
Ironically, the day before Michael
tore into Florida, a major new United Nations report was released
that projected severe damage from climate change would occur much
sooner than previous scientific studies indicated. Scientific
projections on climate change have been getting progressively more
dire, and this latest one is the most alarming (see below).
The governors of Florida, Georgia,
and North and South Carolina are all climate change deniers, as is
their Commander in Chief, the occupant of the White House. In North
Carolina, a 2012 law, and subsequent actions by the state government,
ordered state and local agencies that regulate coastal development to
ignore scientific models showing an acceleration of the rise of sea
level. Real estate moguls cheered.
Trump has ordered federal agencies
not to even mention climate change or global warming in reports. The
Environmental Protection Agency has become the Environmental
Destruction Agency. In August 2017, the Trump administration
rescinded an Obama era executive order that required consideration of
climate science in the design of federally funded projects.
In some cases, that had meant
mandatory elevation of buildings in flood-prone areas. In March, the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which is supposed to
oversee recovery after hurricanes, released a four-year strategic
plan that stripped away previous mention of climate change and sea
level rise.
FEMA has been mired in charges of
corruption, and its administrator, Brock Long, has come under fire
for using government vehicles for personal travel. An expose
in The New York
Times described how
bureaucratic rules prevent FEMA from adequately dealing with how its
aid money is spent, with local authorities using such funds on pet
projects having nothing to do with planning for the effects of
climate change.
FEMA has been woefully inadequate
in dealing with hurricanes, from its bungling of Hurricane Katrina in
2005, which hit New Orleans with a loss of 1800 lives, to its
complete failure when Maria devastated Puerto Rico, with about 5000
deaths. (Trump continues to claim that there were only 17 or so
deaths, and that larger estimates are lies fabricated by his
enemies.)
As was true last year when
Hurricane Harvey devastated Texas, and Hurricane Maria smashed the
U.S. colony of Puerto Rico, it is poorer sectors of the working
class, African Americans and Latinos, but poorer whites too, that are
hardest hit. One aspect of this is that authorities called for
evacuations with bullhorns, but ignored that many poorer workers do
not have cars or other means of evacuating. Even if they do have
cars, those who are caring for sick or elderly relatives do not have
the means to take them to safety.
Compare this to how Cuba, a poor
country that is often hit by hurricanes, handles evacuations. They
don’t just shout at people to leave, they send in buses and
ambulances so they can.
Another comparison is between Cuba
and Puerto Rico, both of which became U.S. colonies when Washington
took them from Spain in the Spanish-American War of 1898. Cuba broke
free from the U.S. in its 1959 socialist revolution, which enabled it
to place priority on health and safety, while Puerto Rico remained a
colony, smashed by Maria with inadequate aid from Washington.
People in the cities and towns
along the scenic coasts of the U.S. generally have higher incomes
than rural areas. They get federal aid more swiftly and generously.
A report in The New
York Times on this
disparity noted one instance: “Erica and Kevin Graham embody the
kind of families common in flood-prone inland communities. The
couple, residents of Flair Bluff, N.C., were left wading through
flood waters once again last month when Hurricane Florence caused the
Lumber River to inundate their home. That very same home flooded two
years ago during Hurricane Mathew. Yet the couple said they were
still waiting for the bulk of federal recovery-assistance money for
the 2016 storm, which would have allowed them to either to elevate
their house above flood level or relocate to higher ground.”
The new UN report, issued by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, compiled by hundreds of
scientists from around the world, studied the effects of different
levels of the increase in average global warming. Since the
19th century, global temperature has increased by 1 degree
Celsius. The report projects that between the years 2032 and 2050,
average global temperature will reach 1.5 degrees at current levels
of greenhouse gas emissions due to the burning of fossil fuels.
This should cause us to be very
alarmed. As early as 13 years from now, the world could suffer much
more extreme hurricanes, floods, heat waves, droughts and fires. The
new report is based on better evidence as we are already in the age
of global warming scientists are studying.
Given the failure of the world’s
nations to curb the production of greenhouse gases, this projection
is all but inevitable. The realistic perspective is that temperature
will continue to rise, to 2 degrees and more, unless such emissions
are sharply reduced, and soon.
The report lists the likely effects
of a rise to 1.5 degrees and 2 degrees. Some of these are: at 1.5
degrees there will be diminishing summer Arctic sea ice with loss of
habitat for polar bears, whales and other creatures. At 2 degrees,
ice-free Arctic summers are 10 times more likely.
Severe heat waves will affect 14
percent of the world’s population at least every five years at 1.5
degrees. That jumps to 37 percent when the temperature increase is 2
degrees. At 1.5 degrees, over 350 million people will be exposed to
severe drought. At 2 degrees, 411 million. For the rich ecosystems of
coral reefs, there will be “very frequent mass mortalities” at
1.5 degrees, and at 2 degrees they will “mostly disappear.”
Sea level rise, already beginning,
will increase to many feet, and will continue for centuries,
according to the report. Another danger is that “tipping points,”
impossible to predict, of various effects of global warming are
possible, where quantitative increase reaches a qualitative change,
with a runaway result.
We are already living in a world
affected by global warming. Just in the United States, we see
increasingly powerful hurricanes in the east, and more and more
destructive wildfires in the west.
Time to take action is running out.
“My view is that 2 degrees is aspirational, and 1.5 degrees is
ridiculously aspirational,” said Gary Yohe, an environmental
economist at Wesleyan University. “They are good targets to aim
for, but we need to face the fact that we might not hit them and
start thinking more seriously about what a 2.5 degree or 3 degree
world might look like.”
>> The article above was written by Barry Sheppard, and is reprinted from Socialist Action newspaper.
2 comments:
(Yawn) this article is a nothing burger. Your grandmother experienced worse storms. Cuba sends buses and ambulances because socialism can't afford people with a basic means to do anything for themselves except maybe drive a car from the 50's while the government officials drive in modern luxury. If Cuba is so great than why isn't this "caravan" of 7500 people traveling from Honduras through Mexico trying to get to America?
Why isn't the caravan of 7500 people trying to get to cuba?
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