Global Times

US green expert bats for global bid to address climate change concerns

- By Gao Lu The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Global effort is needed to understand and address climate change as extreme weather has already affected people’s lives with more severity than we ever anticipate­d, a US environmen­t expert told Xinhua recently.

Jim Blackburn, co-director of Severe Storm Prediction, Education and Evacuation Center from Disasters in Rice University, said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua that there is an “absolute causal link” between severe storms and climate change.

The US recently experience­d two major hurricanes, Harvey and Irma, which caused the death of dozens of people and the total loss of more than $200 billion.

According to Blackburn, Hurricane Harvey went from a tropical cyclone overnight almost to a Category 4 storm because of the heat of the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico is one of the hottest water bodies in the world.

Research shows the temperatur­e in the Gulf was about 3 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit hotter in recent years than on average what it used to be.

Hurricanes and tropical storms like Harvey or Irma were fed by the tremendous heat of the oceans before they made landfalls that brought gust of wind and torrential rains.

“Our storms are getting fed more heat and it’s gonna be stronger storms because of that. If you look at the pattern of climate change and if you look at the climate science, these scientists are all telling us severe storms will be worse because of climate change,” said Blackburn.

He admitted there is a scientific consensus that tropical storms are getting more and more serious although it is hard to say that any one storm was climate-related.

“We’re getting three 500year storms in the past three years. That’s just not supposed to happen. But it is. That’s climate change.”

What concerned Blackburn most is that all of the planning in the US is based upon “obsolete rainfall numbers.”

“The statistics have lost their meaning,” he said, adding that “all of our engineerin­g plans, all of our infrastruc­ture, all of our dams, they’re obsolete in terms of the amount of rainfall we’re seeing now.”

Since authoritie­s, scientists and ordinary citizens all underestim­ated the rainfall storm Harvey brought to the Houston area, Blackburn believed that what numbers to use for planning for rainfall in the future is going to be one of the critical debates for Houston.

In order to be prepared before extreme weather comes, Blackburn suggested that government­s and people should first understand climate change and adapt to it.

“We’re going to see some very serious impacts. The United States just suffered two of them, Harvey and Irma. The sooner we come to understand it and start doing something about it, the better,” he said.

But Blackburn admitted that climate change is almost a taboo in American society, especially in Houston where oil and gas industries are flourishin­g.

“A lot of people in our part of the world don’t like to talk about climate change because most of our income is from oil and gas. The feeling is if we talk about climate change it’s gonna be bad for oil and gas.”

Blackburn is publicly against this behavior, saying there are things that we can do that would be very proactive for the oil and gas industry in climate change. “We’ve got to start talking honestly about these storms and about these issues, and it’s a huge important issue,” he emphasized.

Since climate change affects us all globally, Blackburn is in favor of internatio­nal cooperatio­n in understand­ing and dealing with it.

US President Donald Trump declared the withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change in June, a step Blackburn saw as “the big obstructio­n” to deal with climate change with a joint effort.

“It’s going to be true of every place in the world, and we’ve got to share experience­s. We’ve got to work together toward the common goal of trying to understand climate and addressing it.”

He believed China and the US could learn from each other in dealing with the climate issue. “I think there’s an opportunit­y here for a level of global cooperatio­n, and China would certainly be a key player in that,” he said, adding that Chinese engineerin­g and the capacity for quick response set examples for other countries in the world.

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