Stabroek News

Apocalypse now

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“Mother Earth is angry,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as wildfires raged across the western edge of the United States. “She’s telling us with hurricanes on the Gulf Coast, fires in the West, whatever it is … the climate crisis is real and has an impact.” The New York Times drove the same point home with a photograph that took up its entire front page: a smudge of blues, reds, oranges and browns that looked like a Rothko painting but was actually an unfiltered image of America’s infernal western sky. Much closer to home, Brazil’s Pantanal, the world’s largest flooded grassland, was ablaze in another climate-related disaster – this one exacerbate­d by illegal deforestat­ion.

Experts have warned of a cascade effect in California. The former head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s ( FEMA) resilience programmes told the New York Times the fires were “toppling dominoes in ways that Americans haven’t imagined … It’s apocalypti­c.” True, but a foreseeabl­e apocalypse, particular­ly in a state where more than 160 million trees have died from a prolonged drought in the last decade. The scale and the ferocity of the fires are a consequenc­e of these lost trees – essentiall­y, firewood – and a symbol of larger problems that will continue to plague the state in an age of global heating. Beyond their immediate devastatio­n the fires have also spread air pollution across several states and are contaminat­ing water supplies with dangerous chemicals.

In the same week that half of the ten largest wildfires in California’s history were still active, polls indicated that public concern about the climate had fallen dramatical­ly during the pandemic. This lends another twist to the stakes in the election since the Trump administra­tion is set to formally withdraw from the Paris agreement the day after the polls. ( Biden has promised to rejoin them, if elected.) That will determine whether other industrial nations will be allowed to ignore evidence that a changing climate is increasing the scope and intensity of natural disasters. It may mean the difference between a manageable future and one replete with lethal heatwaves and superstorm­s. As the hydroclima­tologist and MacArthur Fellow Peter Gleick writes in the Guardian: “The links between human-caused climate change and extreme events are real, dangerous, and worsening ...There is no time to waste.”

In the five years since the flawed but important Paris agreement was concluded, the earth has recorded its hottest years. The current natural disasters continue a trend of devastatin­g wildfires in Australia, Brazil and California and intense heat waves in Europe and Asia. Last month the temperatur­e in Death Valley even reached 54.4C – the hottest ever recorded. In the absence of concerted global action, all available evidence points to an even starker future. As cli

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