Marysville Appeal-Democrat

MORE DEADLY, DESTRUCTIV­E AND COSTLY

Assessment warns of how climate change will impact California’s future

- By Tony Barboza, Bettina Boxall and Rosanna Xia Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – Heat waves will grow more severe and persistent, shortening the lives of thousands of California­ns. Wildfires will burn more of the state’s forests. The ocean will rise higher and faster, exposing California to billions in damage along the coast.

State leaders vowed to act on the research, even as the Trump administra­tion moves to unravel climate change regulation­s and allow more pollution from cars, trucks and coalfired power plants.

“In California, facts and science still matter,” Gov. Jerry Brown said in a statement. “These findings are profoundly serious and will continue to guide us as we confront the apocalypti­c threat of irreversib­le climate change.”

The state’s assessment draws on the latest science, including more than 40 new peer-reviewed studies, to project the effects of the continued rise in greenhouse gases on California’s weather, water, ecosystems and people and offer guidance on how officials across the state might adapt.

It’s the fourth such report since 2006, when Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger ordered a climate change assessment as precursor to the Global Warming Solutions Act, the pioneering law California adopted that year to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels.

This latest one for the first time scales down global climate models to project climate’s effect at the regional level or smaller. That approach is intended to provide local officials on the ground with more relevant, community-level informatio­n they can use to prepare.

“The difference between the San Joaquin Valley and the nearby coastal or Sierra Nevada mountains is enormous, so we have to have ways to unpack the large-scale global model calculatio­ns,” Cayan said. Climbing temperatur­es California has already warmed 1 to 2 degrees since the beginning of the 20th century as a result of the human-caused buildup of greenhouse gases. That figure could rise to between 5.6 degrees and 8.8 degrees by 2100, depending on the amount and rate of pollution spewed into the atmosphere, according to the report.

Those climbing temperatur­es could cause 6,700 to 11,300 more heat-related deaths annually in California by midcentury, the assessment found. Such fatalities will dominate economic damage to the state from climate change, costing up to $50 billion a year by midcentury.

Scientists have long projected more intense and longer-lasting heat waves by midcentury but have observed those changes occurring faster than anticipate­d.

“Something that used to happen every 10 years is happening every year,” said Rupa Basu, chief of air and epidemiolo­gy for the state’s Office of Environmen­tal Health Hazard Assessment.

Adding to the risks, scientists say, are trends toward higher humidity and warmer nights. Such conditions hinder people’s ability to recuperate and raise the likelihood of hospital and emergency room visits for a variety of illnesses, from heat stroke and dehydratio­n to heart attacks, kidney disease, gastrointe­stinal illness and preterm births.

The report also highlights shortcomin­gs in how authoritie­s classify heat waves and alert the public.

In one study cited in the assessment, researcher­s identified 19 heat waves that landed more than 11,000 people in the hospital between 1999 and 2000.

These are some of the threats California will face from climate change in coming decades, according to a new statewide assessment released Monday by the California Natural Resources Agency.

The projection­s come as California­ns contend with destructiv­e wildfires, brutal heat spells and record ocean temperatur­es that scientists say have the fingerprin­ts of global warming. Morgan Gregory, 17, grandfathe­r Glenn Gregory, father Scott Gregory, and mother Jennifer Gregory, look for valuables at their home damaged by the Carr Fire in Redding on Aug. 4.

The National Weather Service issued heat advisories for just six of the events.

That led researcher­s to devise a new way of identifyin­g heat spells that may fall below establishe­d temperatur­e thresholds but pose similar health risks. Such episodes, called heathealth events, are defined not by temperatur­e readings but on the public health effects they cause at the local level, particular­ly to the elderly, young children and other population­s most prone to falling ill or dying from the heat.

Modeling by researcher­s found those healththre­atening heat spells will become a persistent fixture in summer months within a few decades, lasting two weeks longer on average in the Central Valley by midcentury.

More air conditioni­ng could attenuate some of the harm, at least for those who can afford it.

Somewhat counterint­uitively, researcher­s expect the health damage from higher temperatur­es to be worse in coastal areas with historical­ly milder climates, where people are less acclimated to extreme heat and fewer have air conditioni­ng. Researcher­s have found heat-related deaths to be less common in hotter, inland regions where more people have air conditioni­ng units in their homes.

Coastal issues As the ocean continues to warm, California’s coast will face more beach erosion, flooding and storm damage.

Until recently, scientists and state policymake­rs worked with a projection that sea level rise by

the end of this century could amount to about 5.48 feet in California under the worst-case scenario. But the latest reports and state policies are now accounting for the extreme possibilit­y that sea level rise could exceed 9 feet.

These broader projection­s incorporat­e the potential rapid melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet.

Even if the sea rose 6.56 feet rather than the higher possible extreme now adopted by the state, more than 250,000 residents, $38 billion in property and 1,400 miles of roads along the coast are at risk of flooding during a severe storm in Southern California, according to a study led by the U.S. Geological Survey.

Among the most vulnerable communitie­s:

San Diego, Coronado, Imperial Beach and National City in San Diego County.

Huntington Beach, Seal Beach and Newport Beach in Orange County.

Long Beach, Los Angeles and Malibu in Los Angeles County.

Almost all of those areas are at lower elevation and were built on former marshes, researcher­s said. San Diego County has the most wetlands prone to permanent flooding, and Ventura County is most prone to flooding of agricultur­al land.

Sea level projection­s are often presented at a global scale that’s too abstract, said the researcher­s, who hope their localized projection­s help the public better understand what’s really at stake when it comes to critical roadways and utilities, businesses

and high-value properties.

“It highlights the urgency to act now and to manage the coast appropriat­ely,” said Patrick Barnard, research director of the USGS Climate Impacts and Coastal Processes Team and a co-author of the study.

One such response is the creation of natural shoreline infrastruc­ture, such as vegetated dunes, native oyster reefs or seagrass beds that help buffer wave action and hold back the encroachin­g sea, according to a report led by the Nature Conservanc­y.

Northern California Northern California – the source of much of the state’s water supply – is likely to grow a bit wetter with climate change. But global warming will alter the timing and form of precipitat­ion, making it tougher for the state to hold on to it.

Warmer temperatur­es mean mountains will get less snow and more rain and the state snowpack – nature’s reservoir – will melt earlier. That will shorten the season of high stream flows, giving water managers less time to capture the additional water.

Rising sea levels also will increase salinity levels in the Sacramento-san Joaquin Delta, the state’s main transfer point for Northern California supplies headed south. As a result, more freshwater must move through the delta to maintain water quality. And higher temperatur­es will drive up agricultur­al water use north of the delta.

Taken together, those effects could reduce delta exports to San Joaquin

“This year has been kind of a harbinger of potential problems to come,” said Daniel Cayan, a climate researcher at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy and one of the scientists coordinati­ng the report.

“The number of extremes that we’ve seen is consistent with what model projection­s are pointing to, and they’re giving us an example of what we need to prepare for.”

Valley agricultur­e and Southland cities by 10 percent by 2060, researcher­s found. The amount of water stored in key Northern California reservoirs at the end of the summer season could decline by a quarter.

“The good news is that we may have the same amount of water. But it may come in a different form and a different time,” said John Andrew, assistant deputy director of the Department of Water Resources. “We’re going to have to be a much better manager of the resource.”

The water world has proposed various responses to expected shifts in California’s hydrology.

Those include modifying reservoir operating rules to allow dam managers to hold on to peak winter flows, which they must now sometimes release to create space for spring snowmelt. Floodwater could be used to recharge the San Joaquin Valley’s over-pumped groundwate­r basins. Existing reservoirs could be expanded and new ones built.

Southern California water agencies want to construct two massive tunnels under the delta to divert high flows from the Sacramento River and transport them to pumping operations that send supplies south. Water districts are also moving to develop more local resources, such as recycled water.

“Everybody has their favorite solution,” Andrew said. “(But) there is no favorite solution. It’s all of them in some amount.”

The study found that computer modeling showed a wetting trend in Northern California and part of Central California, while most of Central California and Southern California would experience a drying trend by 2060.

Another study released as part of the climate assessment found that, on average, annual precipitat­ion was expected to increase in most parts of the state but that the projected changes were small compared to natural variabilit­y – California’s year-toyear precipitat­ion levels swing up and down more than any other state in the lower 48.

As rising temperatur­es drive more wildfire in California, the greatest increase is expected in the forests of the Sierra Nevada and southern Cascade

mountain ranges.

Forest area burned every year could more than double by the end of the century, according to research by University of California, Merced professor Anthony Westerling.

Wildfire risks Climate change will have more of a wildfire effect in mountain forests in the northern twothirds of the state than in other parts of fire-prone California because those regions are cooler and moister. When mountain regions grow hotter, soil and vegetation dries out more quickly in the summer, fostering conditions conducive to the spread of wildfire.

Westerling modeled increases in fires of more than 1,000 acres based on two scenarios of global greenhouse gas emissions. Under one scenario, emissions peak and then begin to decline in midcentury. In the second, they continue to climb until late in the century. Under the first scenario, annual average burned forest in much of the Sierra increased by 48 percent by midcentury and by 120 percent by century’s end. Under the higher emissions scenario, burned area could surge by as much as 400 percent by century’s end.

In recent years, barkbeetle infestatio­ns killed more than 100 million drought-stressed trees in California. But contrary to convention­al wisdom, the study found that in the near term, those dead trees would not significan­tly increase wildfire.

Westerling cited two reasons for that. When dead needles fall from trees within a few years of a fire, the risk of them fueling an intense blaze drops. And while the dieback is extensive, it is patchy and intermixed with green trees.

Decades from now, when beetle-killed trees fall, the heavy fuel load of downed logs and limbs could increase the risk of mass fires. But Westerling said the effects can’t be quantified because there is no historical analogue on which to base the models.

Rising temperatur­es will increase demand for electricit­y across the state as more people install and use air conditione­rs – even in coastal areas where people have traditiona­lly gone without them.

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