Showing posts with label superstorm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label superstorm. Show all posts

Video - Remembering Haiyan and Working for Climate Justice


One year ago today, November 8, 2013, Super Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest storms ever to hit land, devastated the Philippines. Powerful winds and seven meter high storm surges killed as many as 7,300 people and forced a million families from their homes. A year later thousand of people are still homeless.

The chief climate negotiator from the Philippines Yeb Saño delivered a speech to the U.N. climate summit in Doha following the devastating Typhoon Bopha that killed some 1,100. "In Doha, we asked, 'If not us then who? If not now, then when? If not here, then where?' In the wake of Haiyan one year later in Warsaw," Saño said: "What my country is going through as a result of this extreme climate event is madness. The climate crisis is madness. We can stop this madness. Right here in Warsaw." 

Super storms like Typhoon Haiyan are the true face of the fossil fuel industry and unless we can rein in this rogue industry we will see even more record breaking storms. We know that fossil fuels are the leading cause of climate change and we must work to reduce our consumption and the emissions they cause.

The people of the Philippines are on the front lines of climate change and they are rising up and demanding climate justice. We must stand with them in their call for climate justice. They are at the forefront of a global movement calling for responsible governance and they need our support.  Be part of the global movement to stand together and say that we will not let storms like Haiyan become a way of life; we will stand together for climate action.

Last January 25th over 20,000 people came together in the Philippines for the Peoples Surge Rally. This call for climate justice is being reenacted on the anniversary of Haiyan. Hundred of people are staging a protest walk that will take them from Manilla to Tacloban City, the epicenter of the super-storm.

"We work with the local government and make them commit to implement disaster risk reduction management and climate change adaptation measures into making resilient communities. We walk for every Filipino whose lives and livelihood are at stake; for every country like the Philippines that has been damaged and continues to be damaged by climate change and its impacts.We walk to show world leaders that we refuse for Haiyan to be our way of life"

People Surge, an alliance of victims, organizations & individuals of the typhoon, has been mobilizing around the anniversary. They are preparing a two-day rally in Tacloban City for the anniversary wherein 20,000 participants who are survivors of calamities from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao are expected.

With the aim of letting them know that we are with them, 350.org has organized a message campaign. Their fight is our fight. We are a global movement and we must stand together with those who are being devastated by climate change.

Click here to add your message.

You can help by donating to the Climate Relief fund which delivers 100 percent of the money raised will go to the Citizens Disaster Response Center (CDRC). Click here to donate.

Related
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan Offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future

While it is reasonable to come to the conclusion that Typhoon Haiyan was exacerbated by climate change, it is indisputable that this record breaking storm, likely the most powerful to ever make landfall, is a foretaste of our future if we continue on our current trajectory.

As we watch the painful reports of people burying their dead, searching for loved ones or desperate for food and water we would do well to remember, this is not the isolated fate of an isolated people. This is what lies in store for all of us if we fail to make the transition to a low carbon economy.

By some estimates as many as 10,000 people may have died in Tacloban alone, if aid does not come soon many more will die from thirst, starvation and disease. Almost a million people have been displaced as their homes have been destroyed. 

Like so many countries, the Philippines struggles to deal with rampant corruption and violent extremism. When extreme weather is added to the mix we have a volatile and corrosive combination. As always the poorest people are the hardest hit.

While the impacts of the storm are horrific, it could have been far worse. Sadly it will get far worse in the Philippines and elsewhere unless we do act now to significantly reduce our ongoing output of GHGs. First and foremost this means rapidly reducing our consumption of fossil fuels.

We do not need to speculate about what the future of climate change will look like as Typhoon Haiyan offers a tragically graphic illustration. The death, devastation and suffering in the Philippines affords us a painful glimpse into what it will be like in a world ravaged by climate change.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines

We all have responsibilities to assist those who are suffering from extreme weather particularly those of us who live in wealthy nations. Climate scientists have linked Typhoon Haiyam to climate change. We already know that climate change causes extreme weather and we also know that we are all guilty of contributing to global warming. Wealthier nations have additional responsibilities as we know that our wealth was achieved through industrialization. Global warming is caused by greenhouse gases (GHGs) which are a byproduct of industrialization. Therefore, wealthier countries have an obligation to help, both because we are the biggest contributors of global warming causing GHGs and because we have the means.

Extreme weather will increase in a world rocked by climate change and we need to be ready to help those in need. We can invest now in strategies to mitigate carbon and other GHGs or we can pay later as we try to address the awful toll of such events. For those who think we don't need to do either, think again. Failure to mitigate climate change or manage its aftereffects will have global consequences that will affect us all. This ranges from climate refugees, to conflict and war.

The second quarter of the Fifth IPCC report indicates that global food chains are also likely to break down and we will be far less able to feed ourselves and the globe. Drinkable water will also be in short supply.

In the Philippines the death toll will rise beyond the thousands that have already perished. People will die of thirst, hunger and disease. In addition to the absence of basic sustenance, almost one million people have lost their homes and have no shelter. Vast amounts of croplands have been devastated and in addition to the loss of their livelihoods, farmers will not be able to provide food. It will take months if not years to recover.

President Obama said the United States also stood ready to assist the government’s relief and recovery efforts. The US has deployed ships and aircraft to deliver supplies and help in the search-and-rescue efforts and the US Embassy in Manila has provided $100,000 for immediate health and sanitation efforts.

Tacloban has been devastated but this is not the only area affected. A number of fishing communities are located right up to the shoreline and may have been wiped out altogether. Cebu province was also hit hard.

Hurricane Sandy revealed that wealthy nations are not immune to the destructive impacts of extreme weather. Typhoon Haiyan offers us a glimpse of our own future. Even if we ignore the issue of culpability, we must do all we can to help, if for no other reason than the realization that we are all vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

Click here to go to 350.org's direct relief aid.

Click here for a comprehensive summary of reputable charities accepting aid for Typhoon Haiyam relief (list compiled by ABC News).

Until December 9th, Canadian donations earmarked for Typhoon Haiyan made to a registered charity will be matched by the government of Canada. Click here to donate to the Canadian Red Cross.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change

Last week, Typhoon Haiyan slammed into the Philippines leaving a path of death and destruction in its wake. Wind speeds of more than 190 miles an hour (almost 315 km/h) make Haiyan the most powerful typhoon ever to make landfall. According to data from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the area East of the Philippines where Haiyan formed, sea temperatures were about 0.5 to 1 degree above normal.

Climate scientists state that violent storms are more likely as the build-up of greenhouse gases causes the earth and the seas to warm. According to Professor Will Steffen, a researcher at the ANU and member of the Climate Council, a hotter, moister climate is already affecting storms such as Haiyan.

Typhoons (Hurricanes and Cyclones) derive their energy from the surface waters of the ocean. As the oceans continue to warmi this directly influences the storms which form over them.

Warmer seas are only one, albeit a salient part, of the extreme weather equation. There is also the issue of the temperature discrepancy between the ocean and the tops of the storms, high in the troposphere which is expected to widen as the earth continues to warm.

Climate models corroborate research which shows that storms of the future will be far more intense. Such violent weather will in turn cause storm surges which will exacerbate rising sea levels which are also attributed to global warming.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19

Typhoon Haiyan left a path of widespread devastation and according to the most recent reports it may have killed as many as 10,000 people in the Philippines. As climate delegates gather for COP 19 in Warsaw, Poland, vast numbers of people in the Philippines are mourning their dead and struggling to find food and water. Between 70 and 80 percent of all the structures in the storms path have been decimated. Entire towns have been leveled and at least 600,000 people are known to have been displaced by the storm.

Against the backdrop of this most recent storm, one of the most violent in human history, delegate at the latest round of U.N. climate talks are working to pull the world back from the brink of destruction. Climate models show us that this storm is a window into the future of what the world will look like if we continue on our current trajectory.

As explained in the second quarter of the UN's AR5 report, violent storms will occur more often if we continue with business as usual and those in Asia, particularly the poor, will be the hardest hit. Climate change is devastating to us all, but as an Asian nation, with a large number of poor people, the Philippines is especially vulnerable as this densely populated nation is surrounded by the warming waters of the Pacific. According to meteorologists the strength of Typhoon Haiyan is largely attributable to a nearly 2 degree Fahrenheit rise rise in ocean temperatures.

While scientists are always cautious about attributing any individual storm to climate change, it is clear that violent storms are exacerbated by warming seas, and as a consequence climate change plays a salient role in these types of extreme weather events.

Officials from the Philippines present at the climate negotiations in Warsaw are unreservedly  blaming the apocalyptic storm on climate change.

Naderev “Yeb” Saño, lead climate negotiator for the Philippines in Warsaw, has heard first hand accounts of death and devastation from his family. He put a voice to the destruction wreaked by the Typhoon when he offered the following comments,
“To anyone who continues to deny the reality that is climate change, I dare you to get off your ivory tower and away from the comfort of you armchair,” he said. “I dare you to go to the islands of the Pacific, the islands of the Caribbean and the islands of the Indian ocean and see the impacts of rising sea levels; to the mountainous regions of the Himalayas and the Andes to see communities confronting glacial floods, to the Arctic where communities grapple with the fast dwindling polar ice caps, to the large deltas of the Mekong, the Ganges, the Amazon, and the Nile where lives and livelihoods are drowned, to the hills of Central America that confronts similar monstrous hurricanes, to the vast savannas of Africa where climate change has likewise become a matter of life and death as food and water becomes scarce. Not to forget the massive hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico and the eastern seaboard of North America. And if that is not enough, you may want to pay a visit to the Philippines right now.”

“What my country is going through as a result of this extreme climate event is madness... The climate crisis is madness. We can stop this madness. Right here in Warsaw. Typhoons such as Haiyan and its impacts represent a sobering reminder to the international community that we cannot afford to procrastinate on climate action.”
He also thanked those who are working tirelessly to encourage action on climate change,
“I thank civil society, both who are working on the ground as we race against time in the hardest hit areas, and those who are here in Warsaw prodding us to have a sense of urgency and ambition. We are deeply moved by this manifestation of human solidarity. This outpouring of support proves to us that as a human race, we can unite; that as a species, we care.”
Saño was also the lead negotiator for the Philippines at last year's Climate Conference in Doha, where he offered the following haunting and heart-felt warning, following Typhoon Bopha:
“[W]e have never had a typhoon like Bopha, which has wreaked havoc in a part of the country that has never seen a storm like this in half a century. And heartbreaking tragedies like this is not unique to the Philippines, because the whole world, especially developing countries struggling to address poverty and achieve social and human development, confront these same realities. …"

"I appeal to the whole world, I appeal to the leaders from all over the world, to open our eyes to the stark reality that we face. I appeal to ministers. The outcome of our work is not about what our political masters want. It is about what is demanded of us by 7 billion people.”

"I appeal to all, please, no more delays, no more excuses. Please, let Doha be remembered as the place where we found the political will to turn things around...The outcome of our work is not about what our political masters want. It is about what is demanded of us by 7 billion people..."

I ask of all of us here, if not us, then who? If not now, then when? If not here, then where?"
We would be wise to heed Saño's words, the prospect of delaying progress on a binding international treaty can only be described as sadism. One of those on the ground echoed the sentiments of many when she described the situation as "hell." This is something for delegates to consider as they work towards a global binding treaty.
“We can take drastic action now to ensure that we prevent a future where super typhoons are a way of life,” Saño said recently. “Because we refuse, as a nation, to accept a future where super typhoons like Haiyan become a fact of life. We refuse to accept that running away from storms, evacuating our families, suffering the devastation and misery, having to count our dead, become a way of life. We simply refuse to.”

Sano concluded, “Let Poland, let Warsaw, be remembered as the place where we truly cared to stop this madness. Can humanity rise to this occasion? Mr. President, I still believe we can.”
Leaders who ignore efforts to forge an agreement or worse those who actively try to undermine such an outcome, are condemning people to death and playing an active role in creating hell on earth.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet



As reported on CNN, Chief Meteorologist Chad Myers says Typhoon Haiyan could be one of the biggest storms ever to make landfall. This is certainly the case in terms of wind speed, although we have yet to acquire data related to barometric pressure.

Superstorm Sandy slammed into North America in late October 2012 and approximately one year later Superstorm Haiyan, perhaps the strongest storm ever to make landfall, struck Asia. People are asking questions about extreme weather and the relationship to climate change. Fueled by warmer seas caused by global warming these destructive weather anomalies are certain to increase as the world gets warmer.

We know for sure that extreme weather comes with extreme cost and according to Nasa scientists the situation will get worse as the planet warms.

Related Articles
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

Super Typhoon Haiyan May be the Strongest Storm in History

With sustained winds of 315 kph (195 mph) and gusts as strong as 380 kph (235 mph), Haiyan may be the strongest tropical cyclone to hit land anywhere in recorded history. Haiyan's strength is right around the theoretical upper limit that cyclones can reach. The storm ravaged the Philippines with deadly winds, storm surges, torrential rainfalls, and widespread flooding as high as 10 feet in some areas.

Haiyan is known in the Philippines as Super Typhoon Yolanda, slammed into the country's eastern island of Samar at 4:30 a.m., before moving on to five other Philippine islands then, heading toward Vietnam. In addition to massive property damage the death toll now stands at 100 and is expected to rise

A superstorm is a powerful widespread storm, it usually connotes widespread devastation. The technical designation of a typhoon (or hurricane) involves wind speeds of over 74 mph. Meteorologists qualify storms into five classes using the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale (Category 5 being the fiercest).

Haiyan was so big that at one point it covered two thirds of the Philippines.Tropical storm-force winds extended 240 kilometers (149 miles) from the typhoon's center. Authorities warned of possible flash floods, landslides and a storm surge as high as 7 meters (23 feet).

There have been 9 years that have had more than three super typhoons in the Western Pacific Ocean (equivalent to Category 4 and 5 hurricanes) for the period from 2002-2012. One of the unique features of the storm is the fact that it reached Category 5 strength so quickly and at a very southern latitude.

Anthropogenic global warming is increasing sea surface temperatures and increasing the amount of moisture in the air, which may be altering tropical storm systems like Haiyan.

The most recent report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) found that “it is virtually certain that the frequency and intensity of the strongest tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic has increased since the 1970s,” but that there is less evidence of changes being detected in other ocean basins.

In the absence of historical data in the Pacific it is hard for scientists to make predictions for long term storm frequency in that ares. However, it is believed that global warming will increase the number of the strongest storms, while making storms produce more rainfall.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
The Horrors of Typhoon Haiyan offers a Painful Glimpse into our Future
Typhoon Haiyan: Why We Must Help the People of the Philippines
Typhoon Haiyan and Climate Change
The Philippine's Climate Negotiator Delivers Typhoon Haiyan Inspired Message at COP 19
Video - Typhoon Haiyan One of the Biggest Superstorms Ever on the Planet

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie Accepts the Science of Climate Change (Video)



New Jersey Governor Chris Christie showed his support for President Obama after Hurricane Sandy. This should come as no surprise as Christie disagrees with the GOP's stance on climate change. In 2011 Christie held a press conference at the State House to discuss the administration's policies on climate change and promoting renewable energy. The Governor stressed the need to have effective policies in place to combat the effect of greenhouse gas emissions on the environment, while leading New Jersey into a greener and more renewable energy future. As a moderate and pragmatic man who accepts the science of climate change Christie may represent the future of a rejuvenated Republican party.


Related Articles
Comprehensive Review of the Science on Anthropogenic Climate Change
10 Charts on Climate Change
September 2012 was the Warmest in Recorded History (NOAA)
Strong Body of Evidence for a Changing Climate
American Meteorological Society Corroborates Anthropogenic Climate Change
More Scientific Support for Anthropogenic Climate Change
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
The Fifth Global Environmental Outlook ReportA New Study Indicates We Are Reaching a Tipping Points
Environmental Tipping Points
Climate Change Science
Top Four Climate Studies of 2011
State of the Climate Global Analysis Nov 2011
Interactive Map Reveals Warmer Spring 2012
2012 is but the Latest Year Marked by Heat and Drought
Heat in the US Northeast and Drought Around the World IN 2012
Temperature Data: 1880 - 2011 (Video)
New NASA Video Graphically Illustrates that the Earth is Warming
Popular Media is Distorting the Facts about Climate
State of the Climate Global Analysis Nov 2011
Debunking CO2 Myths and The Science of Climate Change
Primer on CO2 and other GHGs
Video: Why People are Confused about the Scientific Veracity of Climate Change
Bill McKibben: Global Warming's Terrifying New Math
The Effects of Global Warming

Bloomberg Endorses Obama Citing Climate Change (Video)



In a stunning move, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg endorsed the re-election of Barack Obama almost solely because of the issue of climate change. In a piece on the Bloomberg news web site, he said that the destruction caused by hurricane Sandy had led him to his decision. He wrote:

"The floods and fires that swept through our city left a path of destruction that will require years of recovery and rebuilding work. And in the short term, our subway system remains partially shut down, and many city residents and businesses still have no power. In just 14 months, two hurricanes have forced us to evacuate neighborhoods — something our city government had never done before. If this is a trend, it is simply not sustainable."

"Our climate is changing. And while the increase in extreme weather we have experienced in New York City and around the world may or may not be the result of it, the risk that it might be — given this week's devastation — should compel all elected leaders to take immediate action."

Bloomberg very directly castigates Romney for reversing his position on the topic, saying that his previous stances about climate change were driven by free-market, centrist ideas. He digs up a quote from when Romney was governor of Massachusetts, and signed on to a regional cap-and-trade plan to reduce carbon emissions. " "The benefits (of that plan) will be long- lasting and enormous — benefits to our health, our economy, our quality of life, our very landscape. These are actions we can and must take now, if we are to have 'no regrets' when we transfer our temporary stewardship of this Earth to the next generation,"Romney wrote.

Bloomberg says that Romney " couldn't have been more right" — but then notes that he reversed his position. Then he calls Romney "a good and decent man" who has reversed his positions on many issues on which he was right the first time.

Although denied by many Republicans, the idea that the climate has been changing because of human behavior, including the release of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane, is widely accepted by scientists.

Related Articles
Hurricane Sandy is a "Wake-up Call" for those who Doubt Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the Upcoming Election
The Staggering Costs of Ignoring Climate Change
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality

Hurricane Sandy Underscores Republican's Anti-Science Climate Change Denial (Video)



As Hurricane Sandy pounds the east coast Cenk Uygur, host of The Young Turks discusses the Republican party's stance on climate change. Republican Presidential Nominee Mitt Romney's comments on climate change during is RNC speech are discussed. Cenk also breaks down the real reason the Republican party has the opinions they do about climate change, turns out it's all about the money.

Related Articles
Romney's Climate Change Ignorance on Display (Video)
Romney Ignores the Causes of Hurricane Sandy as Republicans Shout Down Climate Change Advocate (Video)
Meteorologist Discusses Relationship Between Hurricane Sandy and Climate Change (Video)
Hurricane Sandy is a Wake-up Call for those who Doubt the Science of Climate Change (Video)
Romney's Environmentally Destructive Vision for America
Mitt Romney's Love Affair with Fossil Fuels
Romney's Coal Fired Campaign Versus Obama's Wind Power
What Romney's Energy Policy looks Like on the Ground (Video)
Mitt Romeny: The Legacy He Will Leave for our Children
Romney Increasingly Uncertain about the Climate Change
Climate Denying Republicans Delay their Convention Due to Extreme Weather
GOP VP Candidate Paul Ryan's Unsustainable Voting Record on Energy and the Environment
The Stark Partisan Divide on Global Warming
Citizens United is Helping Romney to Win the White House and Destroy the Environment
Political "Heroes" and "Villains" on US Air Pollution
Big Oil's Influence on US Politicians
Environmental Politics: Obama Versus the Republicans
The Ignorant Anti-Environmental Views of the Republicans
The Koch Brother's Ties to GOP Presidential Candidates
Republicans Vow to Continue Push for Keystone XL
Video: Conservatives Against Republican Denialism
Video: The Republican War on Climate Science
Video: Republicans Anti-Scientific Stance
Republican Obstructionism on the Debt Crisis and Implications for the Environment
Republican Cuts Target Green Jobs
Republican Gubernatorial Gains and Redistricting
Republican's Fail in their Bid to Defund the EPA
Defend Clean Air and Oppose the TRAIN Act
Republican Assault on the Environment
EDF Campaign Opposing US Anti-Environment Bill
Environmental Implications of the Credit Ceiling Agreement
Chu Video: The Worst Anti-Environmental Bill of her Career
Connolly Video: Climate Disasters And GOP Denial
Blumenauer Video: 'The Jihad Against Climate Change Continues'
Republican Obstructionism on the Debt Ceiling Risks Global Environmental Collapse
Republicans Undermining Climate Legislation
Supreme Court Decision Undermines Climate Change Legislation
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Influence
Green Stimulus Spending and Republican Opposition
What is Wrong with the Right
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Romney's Climate Change Ignorance on Display (Video)



At the Republican National Convention, Mitt Romney made some derisive comments about President Obama's efforts to tackle climate change. In light of Hurricane Sandy, these comments can only be described as woefully ignorant. America has a choice to make and it would be nothing short of a national tragedy to see a candidate as profoundly misinformed as Mitt Romney win this election.


Related Articles
Hurricane Sandy Underscores Republican's Anti-Science Climate Change Denial (Video)
Romney Ignores the Causes of Hurricane Sandy as Republicans Shout Down Climate Change Advocate (Video)
Meteorologist Discusses Relationship Between Hurricane Sandy and Climate Change (Video)
Hurricane Sandy is a Wake-up Call for those who Doubt the Science of Climate Change (Video)
Meteorologist Discusses Relationship Between Hurricane Sandy and Climate Change (Video)
Hurricane Sandy is a "Wake-up Call" for those who Doubt Climate Change (Video)
Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the Upcoming Election
The Staggering Costs of Ignoring Climate Change
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality

Romney Ignores the Causes of Hurricane Sandy as Republicans Shout Down Climate Change Advocate (Video)



At a Romney rally in Richmond, Virginia, a Climate Change advocate was shouted down by an angry crowd of Republicans. In response to the statement "What about climate? That's what caused this monster storm. Climate change," the Republicans in attendance all began booing and then started chanting "U-S-A". The man, who was holding a sign that read "END CLIMATE SILENCE" was immediately escorted out of the event.

Throughout, Romney has a frozen smile and just waits for the protestor to be removed. He then continues with his speech right where he left off without saying a word about climate change. This is but the latest example of Romney ignoring the issue, he will not accept science of climate change and he will not acknowledge the causes of extreme weather.

Even a tragic event like Hurricane Sandy will not cause Republican faithfuls to pull their heads out of the sand. Republicans have demonstrated their commitment to ignore reality and if elected Romney will make good on his promise to make his anti-scientific rejection of climate change a national policy that will imperil America and the world.

Related Articles
Republicans Need a Serious Policy Review
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie Accepts the Science of Climate Change (Video)
Obama's and Romney's Energy Advisers: A Study in Contrasts
Hurricane Sandy Underscores Republican's Anti-Science Climate Change Denial (Video)
Romney's Climate Change Ignorance on Display (Video)
Romney Ignores the Causes of Hurricane Sandy as Republicans Shout Down Climate Change Advocate (Video)
Romney's Environmentally Destructive Vision for America
Mitt Romney's Love Affair with Fossil Fuels
Romney's Coal Fired Campaign Versus Obama's Wind Power
What Romney's Energy Policy looks Like on the Ground (Video)
Mitt Romeny: The Legacy He Will Leave for our Children
Romney Increasingly Uncertain about the Climate Change
Climate Denying Republicans Delay their Convention Due to Extreme Weather
GOP VP Candidate Paul Ryan's Unsustainable Voting Record on Energy and the Environment
The Stark Partisan Divide on Global Warming
Citizens United is Helping Romney to Win the White House and Destroy the Environment
Political "Heroes" and "Villains" on US Air Pollution
Big Oil's Influence on US Politicians
Environmental Politics: Obama Versus the Republicans
The Ignorant Anti-Environmental Views of the Republicans
The Koch Brother's Ties to GOP Presidential Candidates
Republicans Vow to Continue Push for Keystone XL
Video: Conservatives Against Republican Denialism
Video: The Republican War on Climate Science
Video: Republicans Anti-Scientific Stance
Republican Obstructionism on the Debt Crisis and Implications for the Environment
Republican Cuts Target Green Jobs
Republican Gubernatorial Gains and Redistricting
Republican's Fail in their Bid to Defund the EPA
Defend Clean Air and Oppose the TRAIN Act
Republican Assault on the Environment
EDF Campaign Opposing US Anti-Environment Bill
Environmental Implications of the Credit Ceiling Agreement
Chu Video: The Worst Anti-Environmental Bill of her Career
Connolly Video: Climate Disasters And GOP Denial
Blumenauer Video: 'The Jihad Against Climate Change Continues'
Republican Obstructionism on the Debt Ceiling Risks Global Environmental Collapse
Republicans Undermining Climate Legislation
Supreme Court Decision Undermines Climate Change Legislation
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Influence
Green Stimulus Spending and Republican Opposition
What is Wrong with the Right
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Meteorologist Discusses Relationship Between Hurricane Sandy and Climate Change (Video)



Forecasters say Hurricane Sandy is a rare, hybrid super storm created by an Arctic jet stream from the north wrapping itself around a tropical storm from the south. Jeff Masters, director of meteorology at the Weather Underground, warns that such a "Frankenstorm," as it is called, is an outgrowth of the extreme weather changes caused by global warming. "When you heat the oceans more, you extend the length of hurricane season," Masters says. "There's been ample evidence over the last decade or so that hurricane season is getting longer -- it starts earlier, ends later. You're more likely to get these sort of late October storms now, and you're more likely to have this sort of situation where a late October storm meets up with a winter low pressure system and gives us this ridiculous combination of a nor'easter and hurricane that comes ashore, bringing all kinds of destruction."


Related Articles
Hurricane Sandy is a "Wake-up Call" for those who Doubt Climate Change (Video)
Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the Upcoming Election
The Staggering Costs of Ignoring Climate Change
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality

Hurricane Sandy is a Wake-up Call for those who Doubt the Science of Climate Change (Video)



This video address Hurricane Sandy and the relationship of this super-storm to climate change. 350.org founder Bill McKibben says the storm is a wake-up call. Climate scientist Greg Jones from Southern Oregon University says: "This is a unique event and as a climate scientist I worry that these events will be more frequent."

The storm killed 66 people in the Caribbean and the most recent figures put the death toll in the US at almost one hundred people. Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org. says the megastorm comes at a time when President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney have refused to make climate change an issue on the campaign trail. For the first time since 1984, climate change was never addressed during a presidential debate. "It's really important that everybody, even those who aren't in the path of this storm, reflect about what it means that in the warmest year in U.S. history ... when we saw essentially summer sea ice in the Arctic just vanish before our eyes, what it means that we're now seeing storms this unprecedented magnitude," McKibben says. "If there was ever a wake-up call, this is it."

Related Articles
Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the Upcoming Election
The Staggering Costs of Ignoring Climate Change
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality

Youth Advocacy for Action on Climate Change (Video)



Young people need to act, they also need to vote for candidates that will support them. In April, 2012, 10,000 young people came together to stand up for the Earth and push for clean energy and green jobs. This generation is engaged in a fight for survival, they are fighting for themselves and they are fighting on behalf of the children of all species. However, they are fighting against powerful entrenched interests that have spent billions to buy politicians and misinform the public. For that reason alone, this is the most important generation of Americans at the most important time in history.

Thankfully, they are standing up for the Earth and its inhabitants. As one speaker said "We are on the side of humanity," and another added "You must be the leaders of today." These people are on the front lines of a movement that has the power to change the world and if they get out and vote they will succeed.

Related Articles
Taking Stock of President Obama's Environmental Efforts
Obama Addresses Solutions to Climate Change Long Before Becoming President(Video)
US 2012 Presidential Elections: President Obama Addresses Climate Change (Video)
President Obama Spells out his Climate Change Agenda Before Taking Office (Video)
President Obama Addresses Climate Change at the UN (Video)
Why President Obama was Unable to do More on the Environment (Video)
The Green Elements of the First 2012 Presidential Debate
President Obama's Efforts on the Environment and Education
Taking Stock of President Obama's Environmental Efforts
The Obama Administration Has Grown Renewable Energy
American Voters Want More Renewable Energy
Obama's Energy Efficiency Executive Order for Industry
Obama Administration's New Vehicle Standards
Romney Lied about the Success of Obama's Green Stimulus
Romney's Coal Fired Campaign Versus Obama's Wind Power
Obama Striving to Put an End to Oil Subsidies
Obama's National Goal of One Million EVs by 2020
Obama's Jobs Plan Emphasizes green employment
Obama 2013 Budget Seeks to Make Renewable Tax Credits Permanent
Clean Energy Excerpts of President Obama's 2012 State of the Union Speech
President Obama's 2013 Environmental Budget
Excerpts of President Obama's American Jobs Act
Energy Efficiency Partnerships: Obama's American Jobs Act
President Obama's American Jobs Act (Video)
Environmental Politics: Obama Versus the GOP
Highlights of Obama's 2011 State of the Union Address
Excerpts of President Obama's 2010 State of the Union Address
Obama Renews His Commitments to Clean Energy and Efficiency
Excerpts from President Obama's 2010 State of the Union Address
President Obama's "HomeStar" Program
Alternative Energy Investments Under Obama

The Staggering Costs of Ignoring Climate Change

As the US election draws near voters need to acknowledge that there are staggering costs associated with ignoring climate change. Although Republicans claim to be advocates of fiscal responsibility, challenger Mitt Romney has made it clear that he has no intention of addressing climate change. Here is a re-edited article that was written in 2011 in the wake of Hurricane Irene, but is even more relevant in light of devastating costs associated with Hurricane Sandy.

Extreme weather events like Hurricane Irene illustrate the costs of man’s impact on the earth. The planet has been getting warmer since the dawn of the industrial age and for every one degree rise in temperature, moisture rises by 7 percent. Scientists predict that warmer temperatures will increase the frequency and severity of extreme weather events. Or to put it another way, global warming amplifies the risk factors for extreme weather events.

Guided by its research, the insurance industry expects that extreme weather events will become routine. But not everyone is guided by rational enquiry; there are many other Americans who are still confused about the scientific veracity of climate change. Although scientists are reluctant to make definitive statements, in 2011, most will agree that there is a strong and growing body of evidence supporting the existence of anthropogenic global warming.

In Scientific American, John Carey explains it this way, ”Until recently scientists had only been able to say that more extreme weather is ‘consistent’ with climate change caused by greenhouse gases that humans are emitting into the atmosphere. Now, however, they can begin to say that the odds of having extreme weather have increased because of human-caused atmospheric changes—and that many individual events would not have happened in the same way without global warming.”

Hurricane Irene illustrates that extreme weather can be very costly. Raging rivers continue to cause record flooding all across the north-eastern United States and electricity companies are struggling to restore power to millions homes and businesses. In addition to the economic costs, at least 38 people died in the US before Irene crossed into eastern Canada.

What makes Irene noteworthy is not its severity, but its location. Landlocked Vermont is not a place normally associated with a tropical storm, yet floodwaters surged through that state and many others in the East.For Vermont, these were the worst floods in 83 years. In addition to washing out roads and destroying buildings, Irene forced the temporary closure of several power plants. Airlines said they were forced to cancel 12,000 flights, a record for the industry and Manhattan took the unprecedented step of halting all public transportation.

Floods are a potential environmental health hazard even after the waters recedes. Floodwaters carry toxic waste, animal remains, and sewage, creating an aggressive breeding ground for mold and bacteria. The exact cost of Irene is not yet known, but so far the financial toll of Irene is up to $7 billion nationally, with insured losses of between $3 and $4 billion. The costs begin to accrue in a significant way when extreme weather events become climate disasters. This year (2011) is already the most expensive year ever for extreme weather in the U.S. and the hurricane season is not yet half over. Hurricane Irene will help push the 2011 climate disaster costs past the previous record of 35 billion set in 2008.

This year [2011], there have been ten separate disasters that caused an economic loss of $1 billion or more in the U.S, beating the record set in 2008. “The “new reality” is that both the frequency and the cost of extreme weather are rising, making the nation more economically vulnerable and putting more lives and livelihoods at risk” the NOAA’s Hayes said. John L. “Jack” Hayes is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Assistant Administrator for Weather Services and the National Weather Service (NWS) Director.

According to property and casualty reinsurer Munich Reinsurance America, the number of U.S. natural disasters has tripled in the last 20 years and 2010 broke records with about 250. Average thunderstorm losses have increased five-fold since 1980. For the first half of 2011 there have been $20 billion in thunderstorm losses, double the previous three-year average of $10 billion, NOAA said.

“I don’t think it takes a wizard to predict 2011 is likely to go down as one of the more extreme years for weather in history,” Hayes said. There is more bad weather to come according to NOAA, which has predicted there will be as many as 19 tropical storms this year. So far there have been eight.

There is widespread agreement that the cost of the financial crisis of 2007/8 was monumental, but far too few are concerned about the costs associated with anthropogenic environmental damage. According to a study released by the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and UNEP Finance Initiative, global environmental damage caused by human activity in 2008 represented a monetary value of $ 6.6 trillion, equivalent to 11% of global GDP. Those global costs are 20% larger than the $ 5.4 trillion decline in the value of pension funds in developed countries caused by the global financial crisis in 2007/8.

As noted in the UNEP Finance Initiative report titled Putting a Price on Global Environmental Damage,” “environmental harm could affect significantly the value of capital markets and global economic growth.”

The report also estimates that global environmental damage will cost $28 trillion by 2050. The report further indicates that number could be reduced by 23 percent if clean and resource-efficient technologies are introduced.

Paul Clements-Hunt, Executive Director, UNEP Finance Initiative, said:
“This report sends a powerful message that the environment is also the business of business. Polluters must pay. Safeguarding the environment and using our natural assets efficiently entail collective action. Cohesive policy and regulation is required to fully account for externalities and speed up the integration of material environmental issues into investment decisions. The bottom line is that if we are to achieve a sustainable global economy, then we must stop drawing down our natural capital.”
The study recommends investors should exercise their ownership rights, collaborate to encourage companies and policy-makers to reduce these environmental externalities, and request regular monitoring and reporting from investment managers on how they are addressing exposure to environmental risk.
James Gifford, Executive Director, UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment, said:
“An increasing number of large investors are recognising that environmental externalities generated by one company are likely to come back and hit their portfolios in another place or time. This report provides an important rationale why investors need to exercise leadership and responsible ownership by acting together to reduce corporate externalities.”
The financial implications of extreme weather are too great to be ignored, particularly when we factor in loss of productivity and ancillary costs like increased insurance premiums.

Storms, floods, tornadoes and heat waves are the corollaries of global warming and as recent events illustrate, these extreme weather events incur staggering costs. We need fiscal responsibility, but surely that includes investments which reduce the crippling costs of climate disasters.

Global Warming is Real (http://s.tt/13doH) 

Related Articles
Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the 2012 Election
Tornadoes and Floods Underscore the Costs of Global Warming
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a "Wake-up Call" for those who Doubt Climate Change (Video)
Meteorologist Discusses Relationship Between Hurricane Sandy and Climate Change (Video)
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality

Hurricane Sandy, Climate Change and the Upcoming Election

Hurricane Sandy wreaked massive destruction on the U.S. east coast. What is particularly noteworthy is the fact that this super-storm traversed a section of ocean that is typically too cold to form hurricanes. In addition to 90 mph (144 kph) winds and massive amounts of rain there was up to 3 feet of snow in West Virginia and other areas. The storm was accompanied by record low barometric pressure that pushed the storm far inland. Hurricane Sandy combined with two other weather systems to become a huge mega-storm. The super-storm ploughed well into the Midwest causing waves exceeding 24 feet (7.2 meters) on Lake Michigan. Even more destructive were the record storm surges of 14-feet (4.27-meters) that struck the coasts of both New York and New Jersey. The impact of Sandy prompted New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie to say “The level of devastation at the Jersey Shore is unthinkable,” he said. “It is beyond anything I thought I’d ever see…it is a devastating sight right now.”

Costs of Hurricane Sandy


Even before Hurricane Sandy made landfall in the U.S., it had already killed 69 people in the Caribbean. In the U.S., at least 75 people are known to have been killed by the storm so far. The mega-storm caused power failures in 17 states, depriving 8.2 million people of electricity.

The storm also destroyed property and disrupted business. Before Sandy hit, federal disaster declarations indicate that winter storm losses have doubled since the 1980s. In 2011, thunderstorms caused over $25 billion in damages in the U.S., more than double the previous record.

As reported by Bloomberg, the total economic loss from the Hurricane could exceed $20 billion, including insured losses of about $7 billion to $8 billion. These costs could subtract 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points from US gross domestic product in the fourth quarter. The industry forecasting firm IHS Global Insight estimates the costs of Sandy could be as high as $50 billion in damages and lost business.

 

Impact on New York City


The hurricane killed 10 people in New York City and left parts of the nation’s largest city under water and up to one million people in the dark. The New York Stock Exchange was closed for the first time since the September 11th terrorist attacks and this was the first time it’s been closed for two consecutive days due to weather since 1888. Rising flood waters set cars adrift and toppled dumpsters. The storm shut down air travel, buses, trains and subways.

The 108-year-old subway system “has never faced a disaster as devastating as what we experienced last night,” Chairman Joseph Lhota said in a statement. It was “a devastating storm, maybe the worst that we have ever experienced,” said Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who was unable to say when the city’s basic services would be restored.

In addition to destroying buildings, the hurricane flooded tunnels and the city’s subway system. More than 80 flooded homes in Queens caught fire and were destroyed in an enormous blaze. Hospitals were forced to remove patients on stretchers including babies from neonatal intensive care. Sandy also caused a crane to break and it now hangs precariously over a Manhattan neighborhood. On Staten Island, a tanker ship ended up being beached on the shore.

“This will be one for the record books,” said John Miksad, senior vice president for electric operations at New York’s Consolidated Edison.

Extreme Weather and Climate Change


It is difficult to refute the observation that climate change is increasing extreme events in severity and intensity. A 2012 special report on extreme weather from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that coastal flooding and more extreme precipitation were strongly linked to human-induced climate change and are expected to get worse in the future.

It is a well documented scientific fact that carbon and other GHGs fuel extreme weather. The super-storm was made worse by higher sea levels and warmer oceans.  Hotter land temperatures may also allow hurricanes like Sandy to expand their traditional seasonal and geographic boundaries.

Although a single weather event cannot be taken as proof of global warming, when pooled together, the growing number of record setting data points provides a convincing picture. According to NOAA, the weather in 2011 was a “year for the record books.” In 2011, there were 14 record climate and weather-related events, each causing at least $1 billion in damage. Hurricane Irene alone caused more than $7 billion in damages. In 2012, Hurricane Sandy caps off another record breaking year. This year, the U.S. experienced the hottest January to June ever recorded and the largest drought in more than 50 years. There has also been record rainfall and flooding across much of America in 2012.

There is clear scientific evidence that global warming fuels deadlier storms and more flooding. We also know that global warming leads to rising sea levels, which boosts storm surges, and increases the severity of flooding.

Melting ice and water expansion is directly linked to climate change causing global sea levels to rise. Sea levels stretching from Boston to Norfolk, Va. are rising four times as fast as the global average. The sea surface temperatures off the coast of the U.S. northeast are about five degrees [3C] above average and second-highest global ocean temperatures on record were documented in September.
As explained by climatologist Kevin Trenberth in an article in The Conversation, “With every degree C, the water holding of the atmosphere goes up 7%, and the moisture provides fuel for the tropical storm, increases its intensity, and magnifies the rainfall by double that amount compared with normal conditions.”
Just days before the killer storm hit, the German reinsurance giant Munich Re, released a report called “Severe Weather in North America,” that states between 1980 and 2011, weather catastrophes killed nearly 30,000 people in North America and cost over $1 trillion. The report prompted the Head of Munich Re’s Geo Risks Research unit, Peter Höppe, to say:
“In all likelihood, we have to regard this finding as an initial climate-change footprint in our U.S. loss data from the last four decades.”
Mike Tidwell, director of Maryland’s Chesapeake Climate Action Network and the author of the 2006 book The Ravaging Tide, said:
“Everybody knows we’ve warmed the planet. So all super-storms are related to climate change now. You can’t have a super-storm that’s not related to climate change. Does everyone agree that the oceans have warmed? That land temperatures have increased? That there’s more moisture in the air?” Tidwell posited. “The answer is yes. So it’s impossible to have a super-storm that doesn’t have the fingerprint of climate change on it.”
During a press conference on October 30, Gov. Cuomo directly linked extreme weather to climate change, saying:
“There has been a series of extreme weather incidents. That is not a political statement that is a factual statement. Anyone who says there is not a dramatic change in weather patterns I think is denying reality.”

Extreme Weather and American Attitudes on Climate Change


The National Survey of American Public Opinion on Climate Change, conducted in December 2011, shows that more Americans are accepting the facts about climate change and personal observation of weather events seem to be playing an instrumental role.

According to the survey, 62 percent of Americans agreed that there is “solid evidence that the average temperature on Earth has been getting warmer over the past four decades.” This number represents a 7 percent increase from the spring of 2011 and 10 percent higher than in the spring of 2010.
“Many of our respondents pointed to their own experience with hotter temperatures, storms or droughts,” says senior Brookings fellow Barry Rabe. “In increasing numbers, Americans are making the connection between weather and their belief about global warming.”
Another survey by the Yale Project on Climate Change and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change reported that 70 percent of Americans believe that global warming is real.

 

Obama and Romney


The massive storm hit just one week before Election Day. It is a tragic irony that President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney have largely avoided the topic of climate change.
“The irony is that the two presidential candidates decided not to speak about climate change, and now they are seeing the climate speak to them,” Tidwell said. “That’s really what’s happening here. The climate is now speaking to them — and to everyone else.”
In addition to Hurricane Sandy, the wildfires and droughts we saw this summer should give voters pause for thought. Hurricane Irene and other extreme weather events in 2011 illustrate a trend of worsening weather conditions conveying the urgent need for consorted efforts to combat climate change.
“Sandy is yet another reminder that the candidates should stop competing over who can poison the weather faster with increased oil, gas and coal production,” said Brad Johnson, campaign manager at ClimateSilence.org, a website aimed at getting the candidates to make climate change a major part of the election-year debate. “If they fear that honesty about global warming could cost them votes, they should instead be more concerned that climate silence costs lives.”
Although late in the campaign, President Obama has spoken about the need to address climate change in an MTV interview:
“We’re not moving as fast as we need to,” the President said. “And this is an issue that future generations, MTV viewers, are going to have to be dealing with even more than the older generation. So this is a critical issue.”
President Obama declared a major disaster in New York and Long Island, making federal funding available to residents of the area. Obama also cancelled campaign events to focus on coordinating the response to the mega-storm.

For his part, Mitt Romney continued his irresponsible campaign of climate denial despite warnings from scientists which indicate that continuing to burn fossil fuel will guarantee climate chaos.  Romney has said he remains unconvinced about the veracity of anthropogenic climate change and if elected, he has vowed to increase America’s commitment to fossil fuels. Romney is on record mocking rising ocean levels. He has even argued that FEMA’s budget should be slashed, or worse still, he has suggested that emergency management services should be taken away from the federal government and given over to private companies.

The GOP’s commitment to climate denial did not waver even though Hurricane Isaac forced the cancellation of the first day of the Republican National Convention in Tampa. At least one poll suggests the American public does not agree with the GOP’s position. According to a Yale-George Mason survey, Americans think global warming should be a priority of the President and Congress. Although Romney is unlikely to change his stance on climate change, Sandy may encourage Americans to express a diverging view on Election Day.

 

Taking Action on Climate Change


Rather than simply react to its effects, we need to engage the causes of climate change. As Bill McKibben explains, the fossil fuel industry is driving the climate crisis and spending millions to derail solutions. In October, Chevron made the single biggest corporate political donation since the Citizens United verdict. Thus far, the fossil fuel industry has spent more than $150 million to influence this year’s election.

We need to heed the warnings offered by Katrina, Irene and now Sandy. We need to expedite the transition away from fossil fuels, increase support for renewable energy and overturn Citizens United. However, there will be no hope of achieving any of these goals if Republicans take the White House.
Those who want to know what weather will look like if we do nothing to manage climate change need look no further than Hurricane Sandy. This super-storm was the consequence of a one degree rise in temperature, think of the devastation that will be wrought if we continue on our current trajectory and realize the predicted temperature increases of four or five degrees.

While climate change may not be a high-profile issue this election cycle, Sandy is an October surprise that should remind voters of the dire implications of a world ravaged by climate change.

Source: Global Warming is Real

Related Articles
Insurance Company Acknowledges that Extreme Weather is Caused by Climate Change
Hurricane Sandy is a Powerful Reminder for those who Ignore Climate Change
Extreme Weather and the Costs of Climate
The Costs of Global Warming
Extreme Weather Makes a Convincing Case for Climate Change
Extreme Weather
The World “Connects the Dots” Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
Bill McKibben on Connect the Dots
Deadly Tornadoes in Massachusetts
Floods in the Philipines Underscore the Deadly Toll from Climate Change
24 Hours of Reality