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Hurricanes, heat waves, fires ravaged planet this year

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FIERCE HURRICANES, heat waves, floods and wildfires ravaged the planet in 2017, as scientists said the role of climate change in causing or worsening certain natural disasters has grown increasing­ly clear.

It was also the year the world’s second largest polluter, the United States, turned its back on the 196-nation Paris climate deal meant to limit global warming to under two degrees Celsius ( 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit) over preindustr­ial levels.

President Donald Trump, who has dismissed global warming as a Chinese hoax, vowed to quit the 2015 Paris accord and tapped fossil fuel allies to key environmen­tal posts.

His administra­tion also dropped climate change from the list of national security threats, announced plans to auction off vast swaths of the Gulf of Mexico to oil and gas drilling, and signed a proposal to eliminate the Clean Power Plan, aimed at limiting the release of polluting greenhouse gases.

Trump says the goal is to make America a dominant source of energy for the world, and to create jobs.

“Together, we are going to start a new energy revolution — one that celebrates American production on American soil,” Trump said in June.

In October, Trump signed a proclamati­on to make America a net energy exporter by 2026, reviving the coal industry and seeking to access the estimated $50 trillion in untapped shale, oil, and natural gas reserves, particular­ly on federal lands.

While the fossil fuel industry has applauded the moves, scientists have expressed alarm.

“The Trump administra­tion, in less than a year, has done more to undermine climate policy than even the worst previous administra­tion on climate (i.e. George W. Bush) had done over the course of two full terms,” said Michael Mann, a climatolog­ist and geophysici­st at Pennsylvan­ia State University, in an e-mail to AFP.

Mann blamed the conservati­ve billionair­e Koch brothers and fossil fuel lobbyists for essentiall­y running US environmen­tal policy under the Trump administra­tion.

“They must be stopped,” he added, because their actions “pose an existentia­l threat to us and our children and grandchild­ren.”

The more fossil fuels we burn, the hotter the planet becomes due to the accumulati­on of heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

The world is currently on track for its third warmest year in modern times.

Experts say global warming can make certain events, like floods, drought and hurricanes, more frequent and sometimes worse.

Among the fiercest storms seen this year were severe monsoon rains in Bangladesh, India and Nepal that killed more than 1,200 people and affected 40 million people, destroying homes, livestock and crops, according to the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs.

Spain and Portugal have grappled with a deadly drought that dried up rivers, killed crops and fueled wildfires.

Meanwhile, an unusually active hurricane season roiled the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean with 17 big storms, the most since 2005.

Major, deadly hurricanes included Harvey, which flooded Texas with 50 inches (125 centimeter­s) of rain in some places. The massively powerful Irma devastated the Caribbean and Florida, while Maria flattened much of Puerto Rico.

California Governor Jerry Brown, whose state is currently battling its third largest wildfire since 1932, spoke this month of how such devastatio­n could be the “new normal.”

“This could be something that happens every year or every few years,” Brown told reporters.

That phrase was echoed in the 2017 Arctic Report Card, an internatio­nal peer-reviewed report on the fragile Arctic, which is warming at twice the pace of the rest of the world.

“The Arctic environmen­tal system has reached a ‘new normal,’” that will raise sea levels, alter weather patterns and unleash more extreme weather across the globe, it said.

Just as extreme are the differing actions around the world to address climate change.

China, the world’s biggest polluter, just unveiled plans for a national carbon market likely to become the world’s largest exchange for emissions credits — earning praise from environmen­talists.

At a Paris summit this month, banks and companies pledged to move billions of dollars out of coal, oil and natural gas.

The United States, however, is “doubling down on fossil fuels to power the nation and the world,” said Julia Olson of the Children’s Trust, which along with dozens of US children is suing the US government for failing to protect the nation’s air, land and water.

Peter Gleick, a president-emeritus of the Pacific Institute, a nonpartisa­n think tank, said Trump’s actions will reverberat­e for decades.

“Just as human-caused climate change is accelerati­ng and having an increasing­ly clear impact on disasters and extreme weather events, the US administra­tion is turning its back on climate science and policies that are needed to protect the American people, property, and the environmen­t,” he told AFP.

“The anti- science agenda of the Trump administra­tion will, without doubt, lead to preventabl­e deaths and disasters, and is inexcusabl­e.” —

 ??  ?? A STRONG WIND blows embers at the Thomas Fire on Dec. 16 in Montecito, California.
A STRONG WIND blows embers at the Thomas Fire on Dec. 16 in Montecito, California.

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