Times Colonist

Climate report warns of worsening U.S. disasters

‘Whatever happened to Global Warming?’ Trump asks in Tweet as record cold hits East

- SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — As California’s catastroph­ic wildfires recede and people rebuild after two hurricanes, a massive new U.S. federal report warns that these types of extreme weather disasters are worsening in the United States. The White House report quietly issued Friday also frequently contradict­s U.S. President Donald Trump.

The National Climate Assessment was written long before the deadly fires in California this month and hurricanes Florence and Michael raked the East Coast and Florida. It says warming-charged extremes “have already become more frequent, intense, widespread or of long duration.”

The federal report says the past few years have smashed records for damaging weather in the U.S., costing nearly $400 billion US since 2015. “Warmer and drier conditions have contribute­d to an increase in large forest fires in the western United States and interior Alaska,” according to the report.

“We are seeing the things we said would be happening, happen now in real life,” said report co-author Katharine Hayhoe of Texas Tech University. “As a climate scientist, it is almost surreal.”

And report co-author Donald Wuebbles, a University of Illinois climate scientist, said: “We’re going to continue to see severe weather events get stronger and more intense.”

The air pollution from wildfires combined with heat waves is a major future health risk for the West, the report says. During the fires in northern California, air quality hit “hazardous” levels, according to government airmonitor­ing agencies.

“There’s real concern about how the West will be able to manage this increasing occurrence,” said report co-author Kristie Ebi, a University of Washington public health professor. She said global warming is already harming people’s health, but it will only get worse.

The report is mandated by law every few years and is based on hundreds of previously research studies. It details how global warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas is hurting each region of United States and how it impacts different sectors of the economy, including energy and agricultur­e.

“Climate change is transformi­ng where and how we live and presents growing challenges to human health and quality of life, the economy, and the natural systems that support us,” the report says.

That includes worsening air pollution causing heart and lung problems, more diseases from insects, the potential for a jump in deaths during heat waves and nastier allergies.

What makes the report different from others is that it focuses on the United States, then goes more local and granular.

“All climate change is local,” said Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist Richard Alley, who wasn’t part of the report but praised it.

While scientists talk of average global temperatur­es, people feel extremes more, he said.

“We live in our drought, our floods and our heat waves. That means we have to focus on us,” he said.

The Lower 48 states have warmed one degree Celsius since 1900, according to the report.

By the end of the century, the U.S. will be 1.6 to 6.6 degrees hotter depending on how much greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere, the report warns.

Outside scientists and officials from 13 federal agencies wrote the report, which was released on the afternoon following U.S. Thanksgivi­ng. It was originally scheduled for December.

The report often clashes with the president’s past statements and tweets on the legitimacy of climate change science, how much of it is caused by humans, how cyclical it is and what’s causing increases in recent wildfires.

Trump tweeted this week about the cold weather hitting the East including: “Brutal and Extended Cold Blast could shatter ALL RECORDS — Whatever happened to Global Warming?”

Friday’s report seemed to anticipate such comments, saying: “Over shorter timescales and smaller geographic regions, the influence of natural variabilit­y can be larger than the influence of human activity. … Over climate timescales of multiple decades, however, global temperatur­e continues to steadily increase.”

Releasing the report on Black Friday “is a transparen­t attempt by the Trump Administra­tion to bury this report and continue the campaign of not only denying but suppressin­g the best of climate science,” said study co-author Andrew Light, an internatio­nal policy expert at the World Resources Institute.

Trump, administra­tion officials and elected Republican­s frequently say they can’t tell how much of climate change is caused by humans and how much is natural.

Citing numerous studies, the new climate report says more than 90 per cent of the current warming is caused by humans. Without greenhouse gases, natural forces — such as changes in energy from the sun — would be slightly cooling Earth.

“There are no credible alternativ­e human or natural explanatio­ns supported by the observatio­nal evidence,” the report says.

In Berlin, leaders from 16 European countries called Friday for greater efforts to curb global warming ahead of internatio­nal climate talks taking place in Poland next month.

In a joint declaratio­n, presidents and prime ministers from Cyprus to Sweden described climate change as “the key challenge of our time.”

“We have felt the immediate effects as recently as this summer, including in Europe,” the leaders said.

“Heat waves and scorching fires from Greece to the Arctic Circle claimed the lives of dozens of women, men, and children while eradicatin­g the livelihood­s of many others.”

Negotiator­s gathering in Poland from Dec. 2-14 will seek to finalize the framework of the 2015 Paris climate accord and discuss setting new, more ambitious goals for 2025.

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