Climate News Roundup 5/27/2016

Les is still away so I’m filling in once again this week.  And again, the news is hopeful, gloomy, and dire.

Let’s start with some good news.  Last week we saw a look-back at the 10th year anniversary of An Inconvenient Truth.  Here’s a Climate Reality Project report on 5 climate successes since 2006.  http://www.takepart.com/article/2016/05/23/five-moments-climate-progress-inconvenient-truth

Speaking of looking back, The Guardian reports on a 2001 Exxon Mobil attempt to keep some climate science from becoming public.  https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/may/25/exxonmobil-climate-change-scientists-congress-george-w-bush

In the same vein, the Center for  International and Environmental Law (CEIL) reports on evidence about what oil companies knew way back when but neglected to tell the rest of us.  http://www.ciel.org/news/100-new-documents-highlight-oil-industry-studied-climate-delayed-solutions/

Speaking of oil companies, several of them recently held annual shareholder meetings where shareholders voted on proposals raising climate-related matters.  Following are a few articles…

Exxon Mobil’s CEO says humanity isn’t ready for an end to oil production….
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/may/25/exxonmobil-ceo-oil-climate-change-oil-production

The CEO of another oil company, Shell, isn’t in a big hurry to move toward solar, but maybe at least he’s thinking about the possibility….  https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/may/26/shell-limit-solar-investment-until-profitable

And here’s a brief summary about these 2 plus a few other oil companies’ recent shareholder meeting results (check out the French company Total CEO’s position) plus how some retirement system investments may be affected….http://grist.org/climate-energy/big-oil-is-all-over-the-place-on-climate-change/
http://www.takepart.com/article/2016/05/25/fourth-biggest-oil-firm-vows-go-big-renewable-power
http://www.cpr.org/news/story/climate-change-becoming-bigger-deal-state-retirement-funds

As many of us know all too well, we have our pipeline battles in VA.  But we’re not alone in fighting such battles.  Here’s a story about Canadian First Nations’ fights.  http://grist.org/climate-energy/in-battle-over-new-canadian-pipeline-its-trudeau-vs-tribes/

From Princeton University (and Take Part) comes a new study with dismal news for our great-grandchildren and great-greats if we don’t act soon to reduce CO2 in the atmosphere.  This prediction of a super hot world sounds a bit futuristic and there is time to mitigate, but still it’s scary.  http://www.takepart.com/article/2016/05/23/high-heat-global-warming-fossil-fuel-renewable-energy

When we think of climate change’s effects, often we focus on severe weather events more than other risks and adversities.  Perhaps we should think more broadly….
• http://grist.org/food/climate-change-is-making-food-more-toxic/
• https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/05/20/the-fort-mcmurray-fires-stunning-pulse-of-carbon-to-the-atmosphere/
• http://www.npr.org/2016/05/25/477014085/rising-seas-push-too-much-salt-into-the-florida-everglades
• http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/24/3781243/how-air-pollution-causes-heart-disease/
• http://www.reuters.com/article/us-climatechange-tourism-economy-idUSKCN0YH1SP
• http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/may/27/australia-scrubbed-from-un-climate-change-report-after-government-intervention

From Climate Nexus, here’s a link to a new, beta site with maps and other graphics that may help us understand better the connection between climate change and what are termed “climate events”.  You may want to bookmark it and check it out periodically.  http://www.climatesignals.org/#

Here’s a somewhat wonky, maybe even “Star War-zy” article about a Yale theoretical physicist on how we might capture CO2 from the air.  Coupled with another article (both from Daily Climate), it may mean we should pay attention to what this guy is proposing.
http://e360.yale.edu/content/feature.msp?id=2996
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/us-leads-globe-oil-production-for-third-year-20368

Bloomberg says El Nino is over.  Good news?  Not necessarily.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-05-24/farewell-el-nino-it-s-la-nina-s-turn-to-cause-trouble-now

Remember the Supreme Court’s stay of the Clean Power Plan?  And the Virginia General Assembly’s ban on the Department of Environmental Quality’s spending money to plan for it until the stay is lifted?  Here’s an update.  http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/24/3781301/morrissey-tells-epa-to-stop-working-on-cpp/

We’ll finish up with a few more good/hopeful news….

Here’s hope for more solar in low income areas, even without community solar.  I know this is about California, which probably also has community solar (unlike VA), but still….  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2016/05/report-solar-storage-could-eliminate-electric-bills-for-california-s-affordable-housing-properties.html

From the Washington Post, here’s a report of a recent study that says rooftop solar is benefiting, not costing, the utilities.  https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/05/26/some-states-may-be-making-a-big-mistake-about-rooftop-solar/

What about solar in the U.S.?  Here’s 2 updates.
http://insideclimatenews.org/news/24052016/solar-energy-27-gigawatts-united-states-one-million-rooftop-panels-climate-change-china-germany
http://phys.org/news/2016-05-renewable-energy-million-irena.html

Last week we learned about Germany and Portugal and how they were close to or at 100% renewable energy recently.  Here’s another story, unfortunately not about the U.S.  http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/the-day-coal-power-dropped-out-of-the-national-grid-for-the-first-time-in-more-than-100-years-a7040291.html

Some good news about low carbon urban transit electric buses in this article.  http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/24/3778463/proterra-tesla-electric-buses/

These news items have been compiled by Joy Loving, member of the CAAV steering committee and leader of Solarize efforts in the valley.

The Pipe

thepipe2

What do people do, when the law prevents them from protecting themselves? This film tells the inspiring story of the small Irish village that stood up to Big Oil. Join the Shenandoah Group of the Sierra Club for a free screening of this award-winning film.

Film: The Pipe
Date: Monday, June 13, 2016
Time: 7:00 PM
Location: JMU Ice House, 127 West Bruce St., Harrisonburg

Afterwards we’ll wander next door to Pale Fire Brewing Co. for discussion.

Co-sponsored by the Climate Action Alliance of the Valley.

pipetrailer

 

Click on image at left to see the trailer.

Running time is 1 hour, 23 minutes

 

The Pipe is a thrilling documentary, portraying the story of a community tragically divided, and how they deal with an oil pipe that could bring economic prosperity or destruction of a way of life shared for generations. In a remote corner of the west of Ireland sits Broadhaven Bay. It is the perfect picture postcard, where the high cliffs of Erris Head and the Stags of Broadhaven stand sentry at the mouth of the bay against the mighty Atlantic, as if protecting the delicate golden sands of Glengad beach and the tiny village of Rossport which nestles behind the dunes. However this peaceful tranquility belies the turmoil that lies beneath, and the unique nature of the coastline which has sustained generations of farmers and fishermen, has also delivered to Shell Oil the perfect landfall for the Corrib Gas Pipeline. In the most dramatic clash of cultures in modern Ireland, the rights of farmers over their fields, and of fishermen to their fishing grounds, has come in direct conflict with one of the worlds most powerful oil companies. When the citizens look to their state for protection, they find that the state has put Shell’s right to lay a pipeline ahead of their own rights.

Winner Best Documentary, Foyle Film Festival November 2010. Honourable Mention, IDFA 2010. Winner Best Documentary Galway Film Fleadh, July 2010.

International Premiere, Toronto FF,10th September.
Released on July 2010

 

Climate News Roundup 5/20/2016

Les is away for a bit and I am substituting for him.  As usual, lots of climate-related news to share this week–some encouraging, some not so much, and some downright discouraging.  I’ll mix it up a bit so you don’t want to stop reading after a minute or two….

Two Virginia residents, one from our coastal area and one from our south-central rural area, penned an op-ed in the Richmond Times Dispatch, published May 16, chiding our governor for the inconsistency of his rhetoric and his actions vis-à-vis fossil fuel exploration and use.  http://www.richmond.com/opinion/their-opinion/guest-columnists/article_1bbd2d5f-7046-5d74-8d9f-d5f247b0a16d.html

Virginians often point to North Carolina as more renewable-friendly.  Maybe not.  http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/politics-government/article78472572.html

Concerning the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the Allegheny Blue Ridge Alliance (ABRA) issued a press release to announce a recent Bath County Supervisors’ unanimous decision to express opposition to the ACP.  ABRA’s website has a lengthy list of official concerns by many public officials.  http://www.abralliance.org/acp-official_concerns/

Communities protesting fracking aren’t just in the U.S.  http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/20/3780097/fracking-north-yorkshire/

The District of Columbia Federal Court of Appeals has decided that the entire court will hear the Clean Power Plan case en banc.  The decision was on the court’s own initiative, which is relatively rare.  The Washington Post and Climate Progress articles explain:  https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2016/05/16/clean-power-plan-to-get-unanticipated-en-banc-review/
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/17/3778827/cpp-oral-arguments-punted/

From Take Part and Grist come articles examining where we were then and where we are now, 10 years after the release of An Inconvenient Truth:  http://www.takepart.com/article/2016/05/11/inconvenient-truth-then-and-now-what-s-changed-our-climate-2006 http://grist.org/feature/an-inconvenient-truth-oral-history/

Renewable Energy World and the Australian organization Solar Choice have reported that Germany produced almost over 90 percent of its energy from renewables on Sunday, May 8.  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2016/05/germany-achieves-milestone-renewables-supply-nearly-100-percent-energy-for-a-day.html;
http://www.solarchoice.net.au/blog/news/renewables-supply-record-90pc-german-ower-demand-170516

Not to be outdone, Portugal recently achieved zero emissions for 107 hours, according to a Guardian article. http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/may/18/portugal-runs-for-four-days-straight-on-renewable-energy-alone

Also from the Guardian, farming contributes greatly to air pollution in Europe and elsewhere.  Although many of us understand that fertilizer runoff contributes to water pollution and is bad for marine life, I suspect not too many of us realize that very tiny nitrogen particles can harm our lungs when we breathe them in.  http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/may/17/farming-is-single-biggest-cause-of-worst-air-pollution-in-europe

Speaking of agriculture, another Climate Progress article says this industry will have to do its bit to reduce carbon emissions.  http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/19/3779777/agriculture-emission-mitigation-gap/

Wired agrees:  http://www.wired.com/2016/05/chemical-reaction-revolutionized-farming-100-years-ago-now-needs-go/

In the more-bad-news department, the UN has released a study showing that we humans are degrading our environment faster than it can recover.  http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/may/19/humans-damaging-the-environment-faster-than-it-can-recover-report-finds

Let’s hear it for the growth of renewable energy!  From the Electric Governing Initiative comes word that wind and solar are “soaring”.  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2016/05/renewable-energy-is-soaring-are-we-ready.html

Reporter Joe Romm echoes the above giving data on 2016’s 1st quarter.  http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2016/05/16/3778542/grid-70-times-renewables-natural-gas/

Here’s an article about a cooperative effort between Cornell University and Iceland to model the use of geothermal energy as a way to transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.  Iceland is doing this as part of its Climate Action Plan (wouldn’t it be nice if the U.S. had one of those?) and has long used its massive geothermal resources to produce its electricity.  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2016/05/cornell-and-iceland-team-to-model-geothermal-energy.html

Another piece of hopeful news about implementation of the Paris Climate Accords comes from the World Resources Institute.  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2016/05/what-s-next-eu-us-and-colombia-show-they-re-moving-forward-with-the-paris-agreement.html

In the not-so-good news department, a Washington Post article reports on the apparent instability of an East Antarctica glacier.  It’s a bit on the detailed side and a bit wonky, but the research it talks about should give us all pause about sea level rise.  https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/05/18/fundamentally-unstable-scientists-confirm-their-worries-about-east-antarcticas-biggest-glacier/

CNN reports that April was the latest month to break records in the high temperatures realm.  Overall, 2016 is looking to smash prior records.  http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/16/world/climate-change-april-hottest-month/index.html

Another Washington Post article reports on a thoughtful and insightful interview with the Director of the National Park Service (NPS) and some of implications for the NPS system for the many parks, monuments, and other destinations.  The Director also talks about who’s visiting the parks and what that means for the future.  https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/05/18/national-park-service-director-climate-change-among-the-biggest-challenges-ahead/

These news items have been compiled by Joy Loving, member of the CAAV steering committee and leader of Solarize efforts in the valley.

Climate News Roundup 5/13/2016

Ed Hawkins, a climate scientist at the University of Reading (UK), has come up with absolutely the best animated graphic ever to illustrate Earth’s warming since 1850.  It’s a must-see.  Speaking of communication about climate change, a new study published in Journal of Environmental Psychology suggests that our perception of what those around us think about climate change influences our willingness to talk about it.

Doug Hendren has added another song to his website.  The subject this time is the social cost of carbon.  Enjoy and share.  Also on a Virginia note, Ivy Main has a new blog post, this one about the legislators who have been named to the new subcommittee of the House and Senate Commerce and Labor Committees that will review the energy legislation carried over from the 2016 General Assembly.  She has a second post about Appalachian Power.  As part of the WBEZ, Chicago, “Heat of the Moment” series, a young environmental activist comes to terms with her upbringing in coal country.

Marlene Cimons has a good guest column in Climate Progress about the particular difficulties low-income families face with electric utility bills and some things that can be done about it.  Unfortunately, some of the solutions, such as community solar, are not available in Virginia.  What is available is weatherization through a federal program administered by Community Housing Partners, the contractor for our area.  CAAV (led by Joni Grady) has been working to make low- and moderate-income families aware of the program, but getting the word out is difficult.  So if you have connections with a local church or community organization that can help spread the word, send an email to contactcaav@gmail.com and volunteer.  Contrary to what the article says, renters of houses or duplexes can apply with the permission of their landlord.  The landlord need not initiate the application.  On the subject of energy efficiency, Rocky Mountain Institute’s 15,610 square foot new office building and convening center in Basalt, Colorado, has no traditional central heating and cooling system in spite of being located in the coldest climate zone in the continental U.S.  They achieved this with passive, integrative design.

Speaking with a Desert Sun (Palm Springs, CA) reporter after an event at the Whitewater Preserve in California on Thursday, May 5, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell said “I think that to keep it in the ground is naive.”  As far as coal is concerned, a look at the new charts from Carbon Brief shows that just keeping U.S. coal in the ground won’t have a big impact on global CO2 emissions.  It is going to require a global effort.  Nevertheless, it is significant that the Lummi Nation has prevailed in its fight to block the largest coal port ever proposed in North America, at Cherry Point, WA.

Frustrated with the snail’s pace of action on getting humanity off of fossil fuels, many people feel that the only course of action left is civil disobedience, as articulated in an opinion piece by Kara Moses.  Toward that end, activists are gathering at two oil refineries in the state of Washington this weekend.  The “Keep it in the ground” campaign is having an impact on the way the Bureau of Land Management conducts auctions for leases of federal lands for oil and gas exploration.  Activists are also getting under ExxonMobil’s skin (so to speak) with their campaign centered on ExxonMobil’s early knowledge about the causes of climate change.  Meanwhile, Royal Dutch Shell Plc, ConocoPhillips and other companies have given up their leases for drilling rights on 2.2 million acres in the Chukchi Sea; leases they had paid $2.5 billion for in 2008.

I try to minimize political news in the Weekly Roundup but have decided to include this item because it is directly related to climate and energy policy.  Chris Mooney of The Washington Post explains “why this could finally be the election in which climate change matters.”

Speaking Friday, May 6, at a Stanford University conference on “Setting the Climate Agenda for the Next U.S. President”, John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign chairman, said that if elected she plans to have a situation room just for climate change in the White House.  Climate Wire has a more detailed look at what was discussed at the conference.

Although the eastern U.S. has been cool and rainy, the western U.S. has had a hot spring.  So hot, in fact, that the contiguous 48 states have recorded the second hottest year to date.  The west was warm enough to melt much of the snowpack so that “Most areas saw major decreases in snowpack during April and are now below normal,” according to the final “Western Snowpack and Water Supply Conditions” report of the season issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service.  Further north and east, spring has been so hot in the Arctic that fractures are already evident in the sea ice north of Greenland.

The fire in the boreal forest near Fort McMurray in Canada is just the latest around the world.  Justin Gillis and Henry Fountain, writing in the New York Times, examine the impacts of climate change on forests and wildfires.

Although it is fairly long (and contains a lot of arguments directed at other authors), this post by Joe Romm makes some important points about the wide-spread acceptance of the 1.5 C limit and the ability to achieve it with existing technology.  Part 2 is here.  Meanwhile, Shell has issued a supplement to its New Lens scenarios that lays out its vision of what it will take to meet the goals of the Paris accord.

Apex Clean Energy has filed its application with the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality to build a wind farm with 25 turbines on top of North Mountain in Botetourt County.  As part of the application, Apex has outlined steps it will take to minimize deaths of bats and other wildlife.

The Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba could well be serving as a renewable energy laboratory for the rest of the world.  Since they have their own isolated power grid they must deal with the problems of integrating solar and wind energy into their grid as they install significant quantities.  How they manage things may influence what happens in larger countries.  Germany seems to have figured out how to manage renewable energy because, on average, 30% of its energy comes from renewables.  What is really interesting, though, is that on May 8 at 11:00 am, 90% of Germany’s electric demand was being met by renewables.  Between midnight and 4 am on May 10 no electricity was being generated with coal in England for the first time ever.  In Denmark, as a result of some unique circumstances, 42% of the electricity is provided by wind.  Phil McKenna of Inside Climate News interviews author Justin Gerdes concerning his new book about Denmark’s experience.

U.S. energy sector CO2 emissions fell in 2015, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported on Monday, pushing emissions 12% below 2005.  Because the economy is 15% larger than it was in 2005, the U.S. produced 23% fewer emissions per unit of GDP.  The EIA has also released its International Energy Outlook 2016, which examines a number of scenarios for future energy use.  Unfortunately, none of them considers the national pledges toward the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The EPA announced new rules on Thursday to reduce methane emissions from new oil and gas facilities, as well as those undergoing modifications.  The rules will require oil and gas companies to monitor and limit the release of methane into the atmosphere at production, processing and transmission facilities.  No regulations exist yet for existing facilities, although they are being worked on.  An example of the need is that the Bakken oil field leaks approximately 275,000 tons annually.

One way that people are seeking to decrease the carbon footprint of transportation is to make liquid transportation fuels using the CO2 captured from power plants that burn fossil fuels.  This has always seemed like a poor idea to me because the objective is to quit emitting fossil carbon to the atmosphere, not just delay its journey there.  Still, I have not seen much from the scientific community about this flaw in thinking until this post to RealClimate.  One requirement for the reuse of CO2 is its capture in association with the combustion of fossil fuels.  Thus, it is interesting that DOE appears to be ready to pull the plug on a large carbon capture and storage demonstration project in Texas.

These news items have been compiled by Les Grady, member and former chair of the CAAV steering committee. He is a licensed professional engineer (retired) who taught environmental engineering at Purdue and Clemson Universities and engaged in private practice with CH2M Hill, the world’s largest environmental engineering consulting firm. Since his retirement in 2003 he has devoted much of his time to the study of climate science and the question of global warming and makes himself available to speak to groups about this subject. More here.

Climate News Roundup 5/6/2016

In just 24 hours between Wednesday and Thursday afternoons, the Fort McMurray wildfire in Alberta, Canada grew from 25,000 acres to 215,000 acres, destroying many buildings in the town of 88,000 people, all of whom were ordered to evacuate.  Ironically, because Fort McMurray has been one of the biggest boom towns of Canada’s Athabasca oil sands, the fire was attributed to a combination of human-caused global warming and natural climate variability.  Elizabeth Kolbert reflects in The New Yorker on the responsibility we all bear for this fire.

In early April I provided a link to an article about a federal judge in Oregon who ruled that a group of young people had the right to sue the federal government under the constitution and public trust doctrine for its failure to protect them against the harm associated with climate change.  Now a judge in the state of Washington has ruled in favor of another group of children, ordering the state Department of Ecology to create rules to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by the end of this year.  In announcing her decision, the judge cited an “urgent situation” as a reason.  On a related topic, the latest volume of Future of Children, a joint Princeton University-Brookings Institution publication, outlines how climate change is likely to affect children’s health and wellbeing, identifying policies that could mitigate the harm that climate change will cause.

Virginia Dominion Power submitted its new 15 year Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to the State Corporation Commission last Friday.  The forecast includes four potential plans for complying with the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, three of which rely on solar and natural gas.  The fourth relies on construction of a third reactor at the North Anna nuclear site.  The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) strongly disagrees with the IRP.  Perhaps Dominion needs to contact the developers who just submitted a bid to Dubai Electricity & Water Authority to provide solar generated electricity for 2.99 cents/kWh, which is 1.51 cents/kWh cheaper than electricity from a new coal-fired power plant under construction for the same authority.

In a blog post on Weather Underground, meteorologist Jeff Masters has stated: “The greatest threat of climate change to civilization over the next 40 years is likely to be climate change-amplified extreme droughts and floods hitting multiple major global grain-producing ‘breadbaskets’ simultaneously.”  He then goes on to document why he thinks this is true.

Two recent papers in scientific journals have provided more information about how melting ice in the Arctic influences the weather in the Northern Hemisphere.  Basically, warming in the Arctic leads to increased incidence of blocking patterns over Greenland.  This causes increased warming over Greenland, contributing to more melting and sea level rise, but it can also lead to more blizzards on the East Coast of the U.S.  The kicker is that the frequency of the blocking events has increased since the 1980’s, which is thought to be associated with the melting of Arctic sea ice.  On a related note, the authors of a recent paper examining how conditions in the Pacific influence Arctic warming comment on the significance of their findings.

India is suffering its worst water crisis in years, with around 330 million people, or a quarter of the population, experiencing drought after the last two monsoons failed.  Meteorologists forecast an above average monsoon beginning in June.  Meanwhile, in Africa El Nino associated drought has severely impacted Zimbabwe, South Africa, Malawi and Zambia.  If all this isn’t bad enough, a new report by The World Bank finds that the major impact of climate change is likely to be on water supplies, with inadequate supplies likely to reduce GDP in 2050 by 14% in the Middle East, nearly 12% in the Sahel, 11% in central Asia, and 7% in east Asia under business-as-usual water management practices.  In addition, the future of the Middle East and North Africa is not encouraging, according to another new study that focused on temperature.  Even if global average warming is kept below 2C, summer temperatures are still expected to exceed 114F in daytime and not fall below 86F at night.

One outcome of our efforts to reduce carbon emissions may be an increase in the amount of electricity consumed.  That is a conclusion of a study by the Deep Decarbonization Pathways Project.  It follows from the concept that many direct uses of fossil fuels, such as in cars, can be replaced by electricity.  As we are learn how to make electricity without carbon emissions and to store it efficiently, electrification of the economy would be a way to greatly decrease CO2 emissions.  This suggests that electric utilities have less to fear from decarbonization of the economy than the fossil fuel industry.

There were several items related to economics this week.  Not surprisingly, Berkshire Hathaway shareholders rejected a resolution calling for the company to report on the risks climate change creates for its insurance companies.  Climate scientist James Hansen presented remarks at the meeting.  The Berkshire Hathaway shareholders were not alone, as documented in a report by the Asset Owners Disclosure Project (AODP).  AODP found that just under a fifth of the world’s top investors were taking tangible steps to mitigate the risk associated with climate change, whereas almost half were doing nothing at all.  Meanwhile, investors in electric utilities are introducing shareholder resolutions requiring them to show their ability to function and make a profit under the constraints that will be necessary to limit warming to 2C.

A new report from the Carbon Tracker Initiative finds that the leading energy companies could make more money by abandoning high-cost projects in deep water and Canadian tar sands, and concentrating on schemes with a goal of keeping global warming to 2C.  Also this week, one of Britain’s most influential energy experts warned that oil companies have 10 years to change their business model, through diversification into renewables, scaling back, and mega-mergers, or meet a “nasty, brutish and short” end.

On Monday, Greenpeace Netherlands leaked documents from negotiations surrounding the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).  They listed four environmental concerns, including the absence of any statements on climate protection.  EU officials disagreed with much of Greenpeace’s interpretation of the documents.

Climate change communication continues to be a topic of interest, probably because it is so important for building consensus for action.  Heather Smith writes on Grist about the latest approach from Breakthrough Strategies and Solutions, which focuses on three points: The Threat, The Villain, and The Solution.  Dana Nuccitelli, writing in The Guardian, identifies three key points, gleaned from several studies, that lead people to be willing to tackle climate change: recognition that people are causing it; an understanding of how the greenhouse effect works; and awareness of the 90–100% expert consensus on human-caused global warming.  Finally, a new study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology has found that “Some reassurances about the stability of the economy may help people take information about human-caused climate change more seriously,” according to the lead author.

A new report from the U.S. Office of the Stockholm Environment Institute finds that annual global emissions of CO2 could drop by 100 million tons by 2030 if the Interior Department stopped issuing or renewing leases from federal lands and waters.  Bill McKibben has a new essay about the international movement to keep fossil fuels in the ground and an article in The Guardian quotes Naomi Klein as saying “Fossil fuels, which are the principal driver of climate change, require the sacrifice of whole regions and people.”

Most climate science is very detached from the actual impact of climate change on people, focusing rather on computer modeling or large scale patterns of change.  A recent paper in Nature Climate Change is different.  It is a meta-study that documents the observations of over 90,000 people from 137 countries currently experiencing climate change firsthand.  Closer to home, Michael Hayden writes about the plight of lower-income residents in Atlantic City as sea level rises.

On Wednesday, the Fish and Wildlife Service revived a proposal to allow energy companies to obtain 30-year permits to disturb or kill protected bald and golden eagles, provided that stable or increasing eagle populations are maintained.  The move is aimed at encouraging more firms to commit to eagle conservation measures.

Utilities in the U.S. have announced the retirement of 101,673 MW of coal-fired power plants since 2010.  The Energy Transitions Commission’s goals are to accelerate change toward low-carbon energy systems that enable robust economic development and to limit the rise in global temperature to well below 2C.  They have recently released a position paper that highlights what needs to be done to achieve those goals.  At a meeting in Washington, DC on Thursday, Jim Young Kim, president of the World Bank, said that if the planned coal-fired power plants in China, India, Vietnam, and Indonesia are built, “That would spell disaster for us and our planet.”

These news items have been compiled by Les Grady, member and former chair of the CAAV steering committee. He is a licensed professional engineer (retired) who taught environmental engineering at Purdue and Clemson Universities and engaged in private practice with CH2M Hill, the world’s largest environmental engineering consulting firm. Since his retirement in 2003 he has devoted much of his time to the study of climate science and the question of global warming and makes himself available to speak to groups about this subject. More here.

Climate Skeptics Imperil Us All

Daily News-Record (Harrisonburg, VA) – May 3, 2016

Joni Grady
Opinion (Open Forum)

theaterfire.300I have a scenario running through my head late at night when I take a break from my climate-change concerns. It was prompted by the assumption that free speech does not mean it’s OK to yell “Fire!” in a crowded theatre. The vision I have was brought to mind recently after the editorial agreeing with George Will that the attempt to prosecute ExxonMobil for its campaign of disinformation about the risks of climate change is really an attempt “to punish the climate denial apparatus” (“Stop The Dissent,” April 25).

In my scenario, there’s also a crowded theater, with people eating popcorn, drinking sodas, and enjoying the latest Mad Max movie. Some are in the balcony in the cheap seats, some are in air-conditioned boxes, but most are just sitting on the main floor. The theater begins to get a little warm but hey, it’s full, so what? It gets gradually warmer and someone goes to the office to ask for more AC. The management says everything’s fine, why not buy a soft drink? A little later some people towards the back think there’s a slight smell of smoke in the air and again go to the office to find out what’s wrong. Management says it’s just the smell of the new popcorn machine, not really smoke, why not have another bag? The buzz of concern grows louder when someone else sees a curl of smoke and a tongue of fire rising from a crack in the back wall. This time the management sprays air freshener and announces that there’s absolutely nothing wrong and that the complainers are just hypersensitive sissies who are trying to spoil the movie for everyone else.

Someone dials 911 to report a possible fire but is told all engines are otherwise occupied with car wrecks and cat rescues. The people in boxes continue to enjoy the apocalyptic film about a distant future. Those in the balcony are being overcome by the smoke and heat but few hear their cries. The management continues to scoff at the complainers and warns them about the criminal consequences of yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theater. They’ve invested heavily in the new popcorn popper and the air-conditioned boxes and nothing can, or will be allowed to, go wrong. The publicity alone would ruin them.

Nevertheless, people begin to leave, with some of those overcome by the thick smoke in the balcony being helped out by their friends. Others are left to die. People in the boxes call in their complaints about not being able to see through the smoke and are reassured that it’s just a harmless special effect. Ultimately they too succumb. And this is the scenario with a happy ending. In the other one, everyone dies because management has locked the doors, contrary to safety regulations they philosophically oppose.

Our constitutionally granted right to freedom of speech is one of our most basic. It protects our right to espouse our own religious and philosophical beliefs. It even protects our right to tell other people what to eat but not to force-feed them. It protected Michael Mann when dissenters tried to shut down his research. It protects the editor’s favorite skeptical scientists whose work is simply ignored when it doesn’t reflect reality. And it protects the editor when he expresses his misunderstanding of the facts of climate science. Free speech encourages active, partisan, loud, even unruly debate over policy, including policy about combatting climate change.

But does it protect management when it denies the theater is on fire and tries to hide the evidence? Does it protect management when deaths occur as a result? My imagined patrons had only to leave Theater A and travel down the road to Theater B. Unfortunately, there is no Planet B. We’re stuck on Planet Earth and it’s beginning to smoke.

Joni Grady lives in Harrisonburg.