The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

The warning signs from Texas

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President Donald Trump assured the nation over the weekend that he is “closely monitoring” the disaster in Texas. “We have an all out effort going, and going well!” he tweeted.

No, the president and his administra­tion do not. Since they entered office, they have tried to enhance the risk of the sort of devastatio­n on display in Texas. Anyone watching Houston who fails to worry about how humans are intensifyi­ng natural risks, including storm surges, deluges and flooding, is ignoring the warning signs right in front of them.

Scientists are habitually cautious about attributin­g a single weather event to the long-term increase in global temperatur­e that human beings have begun, and they cannot say with reasonable certainty that climate change caused Hurricane Harvey. In fact, they are still sorting out exactly how global warming affects hurricane formation. It seems likely that an increase in North Atlantic hurricanes is linked to climate change, but scientists cannot confidentl­y rule out some other factor.

What they can say — and have, emphatical­ly, since this hurricane slammed into Houston — is that “Harvey was almost certainly more intense than it would have been in the absence of human-caused warming,” as climate scientist Michael Mann wrote in the Guardian. The surge of water this storm churned up out of the Gulf of Mexico was half a foot higher than it would have been without the rising sea level, he reckoned. This storm surge not only endangered coastal-zone communitie­s such as Galveston, but local experts report it also blocked water drainage from inland areas that heavy rains have inundated.

Warmer surface water temperatur­es — and they have been very warm in the Gulf of Mexico lately — mean more water vapor in the atmosphere. “This means that when we get the right circumstan­ces for very extreme rainfall to occur, climate change is likely to make these events even worse than they would have been otherwise,” Andrew King, climate extremes research fellow at Australia’s University of Melbourne, explained. “Wetter skies mean more intense rain.”

Water below the surface is warm, too. That subsurface warmth appears to have helped fuel Harvey even as it approached land, where storms typically begin to struggle.

Houston is an example of what happens when public officials ignore experts and refuse to take natural risks seriously. As the country’s fourth-largest city expanded, replacing prairie with impermeabl­e surfaces such as pavement and concrete, the land was rendered less and less capable of absorbing floodwater. Without proper adaptive measures, this made an already flood-prone place more vulnerable. A ProPublica and Texas Tribune investigat­ion found last year that those who have overseen Houston’s flooding issues discounted scientists’ warnings as “anti- developmen­t.” In the coming months and years, the city may pay a high price for such shortsight­edness.

Those officials had the fate of only one city in their hands. Trump has the fate of the whole world.

 ?? MICHAEL CIAGLO/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? A man, foreground, checks to make sure everyone made it safely out of a truck that flooded when the three men in the background drove around a closed road barrier along Nichols Sawmill Road and lost control of the vehicle in rising flood water in...
MICHAEL CIAGLO/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP A man, foreground, checks to make sure everyone made it safely out of a truck that flooded when the three men in the background drove around a closed road barrier along Nichols Sawmill Road and lost control of the vehicle in rising flood water in...

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