This past week we had record temperatures three days in a row, hitting 70 yesterday. Two of the previous highs were the same days last year, the other was in 1998. Having sunny 70 degree days in upstate NY in December is not normal, at least it wasn’t normal ten years ago. Hey, I’m not complaining- it could be cold and wet.
So, is warmer better? Some of the climate ’scientists’ on the denial side actually make the argument that warming will improve things, implying that everyone will enjoy balmy days and have palm trees lining their streets regardless of where they live. Let’s look at the reality of even a few degrees of average temperature rise:
- If you live in the southwest you’re living in a time bomb, an artificial environment created by draining underground lakes to water lawns and golf courses. These aquifers are nearing depletion. Take a look at Lake Powell. It has lost 1/4 of its water due to fatally flawed calculations of average river flow in the Colorado. Warmer temps means you’ll see a reversion to the deathly desert climate that your region had before the influx of AC and water that doesn’t naturally exist in the region. Add the fact that snowmelt is decreasing and we’ll probably see an exodus out of the area.
- Now let’s take a look at the forests of northwestern Canada. They’re dying, killed by insects that have migrated northwards because temperatures, which kept them at bay, have risen. The trees have no natural defenses against these bugs and there is nothing we can do to stop the die-off. There are already thousands of acres of standing dead forests. Those forest were major carbon sinks, now lost forever.
- A little further north to Alaska. Villages built on permafrost are no longer habitable as the solid ground is now semi-liquid. It is not uncommon in major cities to see collapsing houses.
- Take a look at the ski resort operators. They are lobbying congress for permission to move higher into the mountains as the snow no longer falls in the lower elevations where their lifts start. Entire regions of the Alps no longer have glaciers and skiable slopes.
- Deniers are reassured by our mild hurricane season this year. Only one problem- if you look at super storms from a global perspective there’s no let up at all. Typhoons (the name for Pacific hurricanes) have had a terrible season with 5 category 3 or greater storms. This week a typhoon in the Phillippines killed at least 600 people.
- OK all you retired seniors, let’s travel to Florida. Everyone’s breathing easier after that mild season. My question is, how many times are we going to repair storm damaged houses and use federal funds to rebuild million dollar beachfront homes before someone wises up and says that’s enough? My guess is the next hurricane season with two major landfalls will probably do it. Take note- there’s a reason no one is doing much about rebuilding after Katrina. I suspect our wonderful Homeland Security folks don’t really think its a great idea.
- There are going to be 100 million more Americans on the planet by 2050. That’s a one third increase in 40 years. Where will they live? What water will they drink? Can we continue to eat food that is shipped 1000 miles on average from grower to consumer? Can we add 20 million more gas-guzzing vehicles to our already strained highways?
This stuff isn’t speculation, it’s reality. Warming isn’t better. If the Gulf Stream fails as some models predict, Europe will enter an ice age. Disease will run rampant and huge areas of Africa and India will experience droughts that last for years.
So what are we doing about it? Absolutely nothing, nada. The recent climate change summit yielded no initiatives with every attempt to do something concrete stonewalled by US and Chinese representatives. We’ve had to go to the Supreme Court to get the EPA to enforce pollution guidelines for cars and power plants. This is the same Court that elected Bush and the same judges are waffling on taking action.

That’s enough. I’m going to grab a cup of coffee and go catch some rays out on the deck. Life is good here in globally warmed Rochester, NY.