Flooding caused by Hurricane Harvey, southeast Texas 31 August 2017.
Photograph: UPI / Barcroft Images.
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Monday 11 September 2017 05.59 BST
Last modified on Monday 11 September 2017 17.54 BST
For the sake of keeping things manageable, let’s confine the
discussion to a single continent and a single week: North America over
the last seven days. In Houston they got down to the hard and unromantic
work of recovery from what economists announced was probably
the most expensive storm in US history ,
and which weather analysts confirmed was certainly the greatest
rainfall event ever measured in the country – across much of its spread
it was a once-in-25,000-years storm, meaning 12 times past the birth of
Christ; in isolated spots it was a once-in-500,000-years storm, which
means back when we lived in trees. Meanwhile, San Francisco not only
beat its
all-time high temperature record ,
it crushed it by 3F, which should be pretty much statistically
impossible in a place with 150 years (that’s 55,000 days) of
record-keeping.
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Read more... That same hot weather broke records up and down the west coast, except in those places where a pall of smoke from immense
forest fires
kept the sun shaded – after a forest fire somehow managed to jump the
mighty Columbia river from Oregon into Washington, residents of the
Pacific Northwest reported that the ash was falling so thickly from the
skies that it reminded them of the day
Mount St Helens erupted in 1980 .
That same heat, just a little farther inland, was causing a “
flash drought ”
across the country’s wheat belt of North Dakota and Montana – the
evaporation from record temperatures had shrivelled grain on the stalk
to the point where some farmers weren’t bothering to harvest at all. In
the Atlantic, of course,
Irma
was barrelling across the islands of the Caribbean (“It’s like someone
with a lawnmower from the sky has gone over the island,” said one
astounded resident of St Maarten). The storm, the first category five to
hit Cuba in a hundred years, is currently
battering the west coast of Florida after
setting a record for the lowest barometric pressure ever measured in
the Keys, and could easily break the 10-day-old record for economic
catastrophe set by Harvey; it’s definitely changed the psychology of
life in Florida for decades to come.
Oh, and while Irma spun,
Hurricane Jose
followed in its wake as a major hurricane, while in the Gulf of Mexico,
Katia spun up into a frightening storm of her own, before crashing into
the Mexican mainland almost directly across the peninsula from the spot
where the strongest
earthquake in 100 years had taken dozens of lives.
Leaving aside the earthquake, every one of these events jibes with
what scientists and environmentalists have spent 30 fruitless years
telling us to expect from global warming. (There’s actually fairly
convincing evidence that
climate change is triggering more seismic activity , but there’s no need to egg the pudding.)
That one long screed of news from one continent in one week (which
could be written about many other continents and many other weeks – just
check out the recent flooding in south Asia for instance) is a precise,
pixelated portrait of a heating world. Because we have burned so much
oil and gas and coal, we have put huge clouds of CO
2 and
methane in the air; because the structure of those molecules traps heat
the planet has warmed; because the planet has warmed we can get heavier
rainfalls, stronger winds, drier forests and fields. It’s not
mysterious, not in any way. It’s not a run of bad luck. It’s not Donald
Trump (though he’s obviously not helping). It’s not hellfire sent to
punish us. It’s physics.
Maybe it was too much to expect that scientists’ warnings would really move people. (I mean, I wrote
The End of Nature ,
the first book about all this 28 years ago this week, when I was 28 –
and when my theory was still: “People will read my book, and then they
will change.”) Maybe it’s like all the health warnings that you should
eat fewer chips and drink less soda, which, to judge by belt-size, not
many of us pay much mind. Until, maybe, you go to the doctor and he
says: “Whoa, you’re in trouble.” Not “keep eating junk and some day
you’ll be in trouble”, but: “You’re in trouble right now, today. As in,
it looks to me like you’ve already had a small stroke or two.”
Hurricanes Harvey and Irma are the equivalent of one of those
transient ischaemic attacks
– yeah, your face is drooping oddly on the left, but you can continue.
Maybe. If you start taking your pills, eating right, exercising, getting
your act together.
1:50 Hurricane Irma's path of destruction - video report
That’s the stage we’re at now – not the warning on the side of the
pack, but the hacking cough that brings up blood. But what happens if
you keep smoking? You get worse, till past a certain point you’re not
continuing. We’ve increased the temperature of the Earth a little more
than 1C so far, which has been enough extra heat to account for the
horrors we’re currently witnessing. And with the momentum built into the
system, we’re going to go somewhere near 2C, no matter what we do. That
will be considerably worse than where we are now, but maybe it will be
expensively endurable.
The problem is, our current business-as-usual trajectory takes us to a
world that’s about 3.5C warmer. That is to say, even if we kept the
promises we made at Paris (which Trump has already, of course,
repudiated) we’re going to build a planet so hot that we can’t have
civilisations. We have to seize the moment we’re in right now – the
moment when we’re scared and vulnerable – and use it to dramatically
reorient ourselves. The last three years have each broken the record for
the hottest year ever measured – they’re a red flashing sign that says:
“Snap out of it.” Not bend the trajectory somewhat, as the Paris
accords envisioned, but simultaneously jam on the fossil fuel brakes and
stand on the solar accelerator (and also find some metaphors that don’t
rely on internal combustion).
This is a race against time. Global warming is a crisis that comes with a limit – solve it soon or don’t solve it. We could do it. It’s not technologically impossible – study after
study has shown we can get to 100% renewables at a manageable cost, more
manageable all the time, since the price of solar panels and windmills
keeps plummeting. Elon Musk is showing you can churn out electric cars
with ever-lower
sticker shock .
In remote corners of Africa and Asia, peasants have begun leapfrogging
past fossil fuel and going straight to the sun. The Danes just sold
their last oil company and used the cash to build more windmills. There
are just enough examples to make despair seem like the cowardly dodge it
is. But everyone everywhere would have to move with similar speed,
because this is in fact a race against time. Global warming is the first
crisis that comes with a limit – solve it soon or don’t solve it.
Winning slowly is just a different way of losing.
Winning fast enough to matter would mean, above all, standing up to
the fossil fuel industry, so far the most powerful force on Earth. It
would mean postponing other human enterprises and diverting other
spending. That is, it would mean going on a war-like footing: not
shooting at enemies, but focusing in the way that peoples and nations
usually only focus when someone’s shooting at them. And something is.
What do you think it means when your forests are on fire, your streets
are underwater, and your buildings are collapsing?
• Bill McKibben is a writer and the founder of the climate campaign 350.org
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