[Peace] The fires from Tom Dispatch/the NYT's

Karen Aram karenaram at hotmail.com
Sat Sep 12 00:15:53 UTC 2020


Honestly, this front-page New York Times piece by Thomas Fuller and Christopher Flavelle is today's must-read as far as I'm concerned. Yes, the fires, heat, smoke, the works are truly horrific on the West coast and in California in particular, but in the mainstream media they -- and their striking severity -- are seldom put in the context of climate change as clearly as here. This sort of coverage should be everyday stuff in our changing world, but isn't. Here's the first half of their piece. Tom
"Multiple mega fires burning more than three million acres. Millions of residents smothered in toxic air. Rolling blackouts and triple-digit heat waves. Climate change, in the words of one scientist, is smacking California in the face.
"The crisis in the nation’s most populous state is more than just an accumulation of individual catastrophes. It is also an example of something climate experts have long worried about, but which few expected to see so soon: a cascade effect, in which a series of disasters overlap, triggering or amplifying each other.
“You’re toppling dominoes in ways that Americans haven’t imagined,” said Roy Wright, who directed resilience programs for the Federal Emergency Management Agency until 2018 and grew up in Vacaville, Calif., near one of this year’s largest fires. “It’s apocalyptic.”
"The same could be said for the entire West Coast this week, to Washington and Oregon, where towns were decimated by infernos as firefighters were stretched to their limits.
"California’s simultaneous crises illustrate how the ripple effect works. A scorching summer led to dry conditions never before experienced. That aridity helped make the season’s wildfires the biggest ever recorded. Six of the 20 largest wildfires in modern California history have occurred this year.
"If climate change was a somewhat abstract notion a decade ago, today it is all too real for Californians. The intensely hot wildfires are not only chasing thousands of people from their homes but causing dangerous chemicals to leach into drinking water. Excessive heat warnings and suffocating smoky air have threatened the health of people already struggling during the pandemic. And the threat of more wildfires has led insurance companies to cancel homeowner policies and the state’s main utility to shut off power to tens of thousands of people pre-emptively.
“If you are in denial about climate change, come to California,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said last month.
"Officials have worried about cascading disasters. They just did not think they would start so soon.
“We used to worry about one natural hazard at a time,” said Alice Hill, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who oversaw resilience planning on the National Security Council during the Obama administration. “The acceleration of climate impacts has happened faster than even we anticipated.”
"Climate scientists say the mechanism driving the wildfire crisis is straightforward: Human behavior, chiefly the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil, has released greenhouse gases that increase temperatures, desiccating forests and priming them to burn.
"Mark Harvey, who was senior director for resilience at the National Security Council until January, said the government had struggled to prepare for situations like what was happening in California.
“The government does a very, very bad job looking at cascading scenarios,” Mr. Harvey said. “Most of our systems are built to handle one problem at a time.”
"In some ways, this year’s wildfires in California have been decades in the making. A prolonged drought that ended in 2017 was a major reason for the death of 163 million trees in California forests over the past decade, according to the U.S. Forest Service. One of the fastest-moving fires this year ravaged the forests that had the highest concentration of dead trees, south of Yosemite National Park.
"Further north, the Bear Fire became the 10th largest in modern California history — burning through an astonishing 230,000 acres in one 24-hour period.
“It’s really shocking to see the number of fast-moving, extremely large and destructive fires simultaneously burning,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist in the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at the University of California, Los Angeles. “I’ve spoken to maybe two dozen fire and climate experts over the last 48 hours and pretty much everyone is at a loss of words. There’s certainly been nothing in living memory on this scale.”
"While the state mobilizes to deal with the immediate threats, the fires will also leave California with difficult and costly longer-term problems, everything from the effects of smoke inhalation to damaged drinking water systems.
"Wildfire smoke can in the worst cases be deadly, especially among older people. Studies have shown that when waves of smoke hit, the rate of hospitalizations rises, and patients experience respiratory problems, heart attacks and strokes.
"The coronavirus pandemic adds a new layer of risk to an already perilous situation. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have issued statements warning that people with Covid-19 are at increased risk from wildfire smoke during the pandemic.
“The longer we have bad air in California, the more we’ll be concerned about adverse health effects,” said John Balmes, a spokesman for the American Lung Association and a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.
"As for drinking water, scientists have known for years that runoff from burned homes can put harmful chemicals into ground water and reservoirs. But research in the aftermath of the 2017 wildfires in wine country north of San Francisco and the 2018 fire that destroyed the town of Paradise in the foothills of the Sierra discovered a different threat: Benzene and other dangerous contaminants were found inside water systems, possibly from heat-damaged plastics in the water infrastructure.
“Communities need to recognize this vulnerability,” said Andrew J. Whelton, a professor in environmental engineering at Purdue University, and an author of a study on water contamination in Paradise.
“Dangerous chemicals can leach from inside water systems for months after a fire.”
"The Environmental Protection Agency classifies water with benzene levels above 500 parts per billion as hazardous. Some samples in Paradise after the fire were found to have 2,000 parts per billion. In Sonoma County after the wine country fires some samples had 40,000 parts per billion, Dr. Whelton said.
"Before now, many Californians assumed it would be an earthquake that might knock out their power, damage their homes and render their neighborhoods uninhabitable."
https://www.nytimes.com/…/climate-change-california-wildfir… <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/10/us/climate-change-california-wildfires.html?fbclid=IwAR2ifkO2DTrfT0GrDgPPX6LF8xdv1f5ok9nZPCqpbF-ZDsdafgXg29DNWQU>
If climate change was a somewhat abstract notion a decade ago, today it is all too real for Californians fleeing wildfires and smothered in a blanket of smoke, the worst year of fires on record.

 <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/10/us/climate-change-california-wildfires.html?fbclid=IwAR0L5RM23YYyi6Sink4WfylYFUd28z1-NcA24gNE_q-yOfvnUuJoVjCc4ns> <https://www.facebook.com/tomdispatch/posts/3220943967991203?__tn__=K-R0.g#>
NYTIMES.COM
A Climate Reckoning in Fire-Stricken California <https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2020%2F09%2F10%2Fus%2Fclimate-change-california-wildfires.html%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR2ifkO2DTrfT0GrDgPPX6LF8xdv1f5ok9nZPCqpbF-ZDsdafgXg29DNWQU&h=AT2DnP_4EWF9mRKIimtz8Y0zBLK8M8Jd4rQA2pgHHu69ffsVJqRKXorD3nnOS57DCsix0dYECI1x69qcbAPPtbEHH9HyGKklFzgXe6ZPXAywIGu0rMXApIfYJXxmvTpNM5MSo9WD7bhWzBxepweBGK2Bt3Dq1z8mqIBd22p0JMDTgzJhGYzdBkTfTmn3LsfwBW--SS8fujBW0nQVuz0QuoKmhVvjWyKc3zS3vXmkwMAMlk5gvVkwT6c5_t28ifx3cv8nLLuXooGEKrtgJjTuuOZO0z-AaI94qjaXOvltmrOF4k_dBsgcQlu_DQsWRPkS-PXntn6Y31QR1j0_oDhZvGnEL2oGjYtcr2qpWmj0N957-DxY0qQbtJqhlADs-ufaIdLhW1_F54iM9g5qVw07rLu4xMiAWMjLT-KPoaalI64KS8swxAka9jvqW1L44UWfVFOwAPLAZzRhEuePqc0MSUwBxY1cYMc88Xm3Yh_NLhTODso05joqIqP7_ZzqDz9y1voQUwQGhPKCpN1U3jjkZiRSyFRzxrywzvHTZv2gnypI2ERi4P_awuFn4FzSbVp4c0Se9IvTi0VVJBY635n81zyfTQdUc-lUNAHdF4kiN-k3VPlEkhnrL4bAYS3N5w>
If climate change was a somewhat abstract notion a decade ago, today it is all too real for Californians fleeing wildfires and smothered in a blanket of smoke, the worst year of fires on record.
 <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/10/us/climate-change-california-wildfires.html?fbclid=IwAR0L5RM23YYyi6Sink4WfylYFUd28z1-NcA24gNE_q-yOfvnUuJoVjCc4ns>
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