Water wars, oil wars, climate change, global warming, A personal view
10 Jul
Last week I was at a business meeting on the 24th floor of a building in downtown Rochester (NY). The meeting room had floor to ceiling windows. Rochester doesn’t have a lot of tall buildings so the view was unfettered and we could see miles with Lake Ontario to the north and the Bristol Hills to the south. The vista you see from high above Rochester is one of a green city in the literal sense. It looks more like a forest perforated by the occasional taller building than an urban area because we have a very active city forestry department and many large deciduous trees. It is a beautiful perspective that debunks this area’s reputation as having terrible weather- yes we get snowy winters but the spring, summer and fall (which are lengthening) are the best in the country due to a great balance of rainfall, median temps and a lack of extreme weather events.
The environmental greening of Rochester is another story. In comparison to many cities we are not in bad shape. Air pollution is limited to the occasional high ozone alert (there’s one out today due to the heat). This is a car city but traffic and commutes are minimal- the longest commute across the county should average less than a half hour. Eastman Kodak, once our largest employer, was also the single largest polluter in New York State due primarily to the fact that they were a chemical company. Now, with 60,000 less employees and digital technology, they are in the process of demolishing their old plants. They imploded two last week and have taken down nearly 40 buildings that could not be reused. Long term this means the Genesee river which neatly divides the city will be able to return to a more pristine state.
Given these advantages the city and county needs a comprehensive Green Region Plan. Gas is going to rise precipitously in the not too distant future as the oil wars heat up and destabilize world supplies even more. It is time for us to convert our perfect location and assets into a global example of the greening of a city.
Some aspects of a plan might include:
- A visionary overhaul of mass transit. We are building a state of the art bus terminal designed by Moshe Safdie downtown. The obvious next step is to create a light rail axis through the terminal that follows our major highways all the way out to the malls that conveniently mark our county borders. This would turn downtown back to a center city and eliminate much dependence on cars. Buses would serve as neighborhood connections.
- Move building codes to green standards and begin adding roof gardens to all commercial buildings
- We have an amazing bike/walk trail network, in part due to the Erie Canal that crosses the county. You can literally ride north/south and east/west across the entire county without riding on a road. This network is being greatly expanded with trails along the river from downtown to Lake Ontario and waterfront trails along the lakefront. Three season bicycle commuting is practical now.
- Energy. Wind farms are popping up in the outlying counties but are not practical in the urban areas. What we should be exploring are geothermal plants. These can be built on a small footprint, require no fuel, emit nothing and can run continuously forever (no storage issues). Theoretically one could power the downtown area. Why these plants are not being aggressively pursued is a mystery to me.
To be cont’d…
6 Jul
The Pacific Northwest, a part of the country not normally associated with extreme heat is under warning for temps in the 100s.
Parts of Arizona and Nevada hit 125+ degrees.
1/3 of Texas, normally arrid, is under severe flood watches, with more torrential rain coming, the ground saturated and rivers and streams already at flood levels.
Arctic ponds that have existed for thousands of years are drying up.
25 Jun
“Nor is it just the Southwest that could be drying out. The U.S. Drought Monitor reports that 50 per cent of the United States is currently experiencing unusually dry or drought conditions.”
The Toronto Globe and Mail has a provocative piece on the water crisis affecting much of the US. The unique thing about this piece is that we have not seen any US coverage that comes close to capturing the severity of this problem. Leave it to our neighbors to the north to tell us the reality that a lot of our press seems to discount. Instead we have endless blather about who caused climate change.
Thanks to Franke James.
Update: The news is reporting enormous forest fires in the Lake Tahoe area and southern Alaska today with hundreds of homes destroyed and dry conditions with high winds.
7 Jun
And they apparently like being warmer in a place that was named Greenland as a PR move by Vikings who wanted to encourage people to live there.
“Already we are starting our sentences by saying, ‘In the days when it was cold,’ ” reflected Thomsen, 45, who in 1991 became the first Greenland woman to ski across the ice cap. “We’re starting to talk about it like it was history, and it’s only been about five years.”
11 degrees in 12 years in a place covered with miles thick ice sheets that, if they melt, basically destroy the world. Ouch. I hope they’re enjoying their tans…