Tags
Climate Change, Climate Reality Project, Climate-related natural disasters, Extreme Weather & the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know, Global warming, Jet Stream, NASA’s Carbon Monitoring System (CMS)
U.S. 2017 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters
Photo Credit: NOAA
Earlier this month, while the Trump administration quietly cancelled NASA’s Carbon Monitoring System (CMS), concentrations of carbon dioxide at the Mauna Loa Observatory averaged above 410 parts per million (ppm) throughout April. With such irresponsible action, we-the-people must prepare ourselves for more extreme weather.
Extreme Weather & the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know, published by the Climate Reality Project (March 2018), helps us to understand the challenges we now face. As the captioned NOAA chart shows, climate-related and other natural disasters are costly. Total damages in 2017 left the U.S. with a bill of $306 billion. Families who were hit are still recovering from their loss. Families in poor communities may never recover.
Here’s what we need to know about our extreme weather and the climate crisis. Bear in mind that weather refers to short-term atmospheric changes in temperature, humidity, precipitation, wind, cloud cover, and visibility. Climate is the average of weather patterns over a longer period of 30 or more years.
Hurricanes – With average global sea surface temperatures becoming warmer, hurricanes can become more powerful. A warmer ocean also means an increase in evaporation, thereby feeding hurricanes with much more water to dump on those of us who live in their path. It gets worse. As melting ice caps and glaciers raise sea levels, storm surges caused by hurricanes will be stronger and carry water farther and farther inland.
Flooding – As air temperatures increase, more water evaporates into the atmosphere. Because warmer air holds more water vapor, some places get more rain and snow than their average annual amounts; other places may experience intense rainstorms. At the same time, rising sea levels are worsening coastal flooding worldwide.
Drought – Soils dry out when evaporation increases over land. When the rain comes, the hard, cracked ground absorbs little water. The run-off carries pollutants in the dry soil into our streams, rivers, and lakes. Drought also worsens forest fires.
Wildfires – Droughts kill plant life. Dried out, dead vegetation can ignite with a spark. Once started, these fires are harder to contain. With warm weather arriving earlier and extending further into the fall, we now face longer fire seasons. To make matters worse, pests like the mountain pine beetle thrive in the warm, dry weather. The dead trees dry out, adding to the fury of our forest fires.
Extreme Heat – Of the 18 hottest years on record, 17 have occurred this century. If we don’t reduce the greenhouse gases heating up our atmosphere, more and more of us will face the deadly threshold of extreme heat on our fragile human bodies.
Extreme Cold – As global temperatures rise and the Arctic continues to warm, the jet stream is slowing and becoming more wavy. This causes bone-chilling Arctic air to linger longer in northern regions and spread much farther south than usual.
While we cannot prevent climate-related natural disasters from occurring, it’s our responsibility to do everything we can to prevent the worst of it. And it certainly could get much worse.
Pingback: Extreme Weather and the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know | Three Worlds One Vision – A record of mankind's degradation of planet earth
Thanks for sharing my post with your readers 🙂
LikeLike
I was fairly amazed to find that one of my pupils had gone to India to visit Granny and Grandad and found that the temperature in the daytime was constantly over 40 degrees centigrade. The locals were actually beginning to dig out underground shelters to live in to combat the heat. The problem, of course, is that the major countries causing this ,China, India, Russia ands the USA are just not interested in the long term view.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Summer temperatures here in Southern California have been higher than normal. In Summer 2017, we faced a week with temperatures approaching 40 degrees centigrade (104 degrees Fahrenheit). When it gets that hot, I stay indoors as much as possible.
Our global capitalist economic system is focused on continual growth. The natural world upon which capitalism gorges itself is expected to satiate its appetite until death. The guardians of the system are doing well, thank you. Think not that they don’t have a long-term view. They have amassed more than enough wealth to ensure that their children and grandchildren will survive whatever comes in a luxurious and secure environment.
LikeLike
Important information and I hope it gets read by the many unbelievers.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Bernadette. I hope so, too. There must come a time in every denier’s mind when reality jolts inertia.
LikeLiked by 1 person
What I don’t understand is how he seems to have power to do virtually anything. Isn’t there anyone or anything to put the brakes on this juggernaut?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Denzil, whether it’s anthropomorphic climate change (which incidentally I don’t quite buy into and for good personal reasons) or international relations, the problem we’re faced with is not just a Donald Trump, the mirror of Americana, but billions of apathetic people bought, paid for, and drugged by the capitalist consumerist society. Bottom line is, few care and when something goes wrong the bugaboo of blaming minorities, racism, mob rule, pogroms and genocidal madness is used in lieu of taking responsibility for the way things are. Gird your loins or tighten your seat belts, whichever, there is much more of this in the offing. …and now for the really bad news…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Denzil, the corporate giants have taken over our current administration and undoing, one by one, all regulations designed to restrain their abusive power. We in America are facing a constitutional crisis. The juggernaut has removed its mask. Our European allies must now assess this growing unstable relationship. I do believe that, like it or not, the countries of Eurasia will be forced to unite to confront the juggernaut.
LikeLike
Butting in here… quote: /”//I do believe that, like it or not, the countries of Eurasia will be forced to unite to confront the juggernaut.”/ It looks like they are already doing that though there is still a lot of mistrust which the juggernaut is currently exploiting. The question on my mind is, what will that confrontation result in for the world? How much overt and covert violence, destruction and death will it contribute to?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Indeed.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Great post, dear Rosaliene! Really, the time is running out….
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Maria. Indeed, and we-the-people of Earth continue to drag our feet.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for the re-blog, Cyril. Have a great week 🙂
LikeLike
Pingback: Extreme Weather and the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know – By Rosaliene Bacchus
Thanks for sharing, GuyFrog. May the rebirth at springtime remind us of our human capacity to arise anew and glorious after a cold snap.
LikeLike
When the “hoax” squarely hits home, the willfully ignorant will no longer be able to deny. Perhaps they will rejoice for the End Times. (Me bad — and I just got home from church!)
LikeLiked by 1 person
I agree on both counts, JoAnn. As for the End Times, a faction of America’s Christian Fundamentalists are already paving the way for the Messiah’s triumphal return by reinstating Jerusalem as the capital of Modern Israel.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes. That kind of fervor makes me uneasy. Scary times — on all fronts.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent review of our climate situation, Ros. The last item is really fascinating. Because Earth’s north polar ice cap floats over the Arctic Ocean, unlike the south polar ice cap over continental Antarctica, it is melting faster. This is due to Earth’s oceans absorbing the excess atmospheric heat produced by fossil fuel driven climate change. As the Arctic melts, the warming sea water underneath releases its heat to the atmosphere causing low pressure systems to develop (i.e. unstable rising air). Normally, high pressure dominates the Arctic (i.e. stable descending air) as Hadley cells move air from the equator to the poles (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadley_cell). The normal high pressure over the Arctic is a major factor in the northern hemisphere’s jet stream pattern. Now that it’s being disrupted, the northern jet is meandering wildly and this results in extreme weather events for North America, Europe, and Asia.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Robert, credit must go to the team at The Climate Reality Project. Thanks for expanding on factors causing our extreme cold weather. We humans fail to fully grasp the complex system that dictates (for want of a better word) Earth’s climate. When we tinker with the temperature, we trigger all of its interconnected parts.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The words of Lao Tzu give me some comfort in understanding the reality of present conditions: “Heaven and earth are not sentimental” “That which isn’t in conformity with Tao soon perishes.” Perhaps a grim view and things could miraculously turn around with divine intervention but it certainly won’t be by the fools of folly. Sadly, the few effect the many.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Mike, I also find the words of Lao Tzu comforting. As we do with our climate, we do also with the interconnected relationships among our species and with all of Nature. The few who disrupt the harmony of Earth’s systems know not what they do.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Rosaliene,
Good post, as usual. The generalized devitalization of the planet has a leveling effect. The industrial powerhouses and their drivers cannot escape the global changes. The wheels seem to be spinning out of control, but they aren’t touching the ground. Situations like this may force everyone to get priorities straight.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Katharine. I agree that generalized devitalization will have a leveling effect, but only for the 95-99 Percent. The power elite driving our climate crisis will escape to their gated communities and luxury bunkers located in “safe zones.”
LikeLiked by 1 person
Rosaliene,
It’s impossible to predict what might happen. When I talk of devitalization, including the generalized poisoning of air, earth, and water, the 0.1% are just as vulnerable as anyone, because they still live on the same earth. Maybe if Elon Musk gets his way, the super-rich can travel to unspoiled planets, if they can find them,
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent summary on the most urgent topic ever to confront the human species. This stuff should be broadcast nightly on the 6 o’clock new – to make sure it gets through to people. The great tragedy is that the fossil fuel industry prevents it from happening.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I share your need for urgency, Dr. Bramhall. Since the mainstream media isn’t doing their job, those of us who are engaged must do the work of spreading the news.
LikeLike
Thanks for the explanation on extreme cold. Many people don’t understand that. I guess that’s why extreme weather and climate crisis are better terms than global warming.
LikeLiked by 1 person
A clear, compelling overview of the dimensions of the climate crisis. I remember reading an interesting snippet in an otherwise unreadable book. I can no longer remember the books title or author. 🙂
I do remember, though, that the author used a metaphor to describe our current crises. A young man was driving his car through a desert with his gas gauge indicating the tank was almost empty. There were no stations within range, so he stepped on the gas and raced until his car finally stopped. It seems many of us are doing the the same thing. We may need to suffer far more weather disasters until we are literally forced to make changes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Carol. A powerful and apt metaphor. In pulling out of the Paris Climate Change Agreement, our government has, indeed, “stepped on the gas.”
The power elite care not for our suffering and loss. They will be forced to take action when the nation can no longer foot the exorbitant bills from weather disasters.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh, hey, I’m reading here! 🙂 And oh, hey, the “nation” can easily afford to take care of any and all weather-related disasters. All that needs to be done is to take a dollar out of every thousand spent on the military and the NRA’s gun vision, and there’s plenty of money for all good things. But you see, it’s a matter of the “nation’s” priorities, not just those of the elites, and as history is masterful at demonstrating, the numbties love to follow after the very worst of their psychopathic leaders. What, I wonder, and have since the heydays of my environmental activism, is the %age of population that actually cares and is educated in the real reasons for civilization’s expanding social, environmental and let’s not forget, spiritual, problems? I’d hazard an educated guess at less than 1%. So… unless someone knows the magic formula to develop global awareness through empathy, only the disasters, and their resultant wars, pogroms and genocides will create awareness, by then too late and the wrong kind in any case. For those with the organizations, I think of those turkeys collected in the pen a week before Thanksgiving: says the head gobbler, “Now that we’re organized, what do we do?” I’ll tell you what to do: learn to fly in a hurry to escape. Forget those who insist the “organizers” have the welfare of all turkeys at heart and live to fight another day. The trend: China, now with a for-life dictator, has banned another book and predictably it’s George Orwell’s “1984”. No surprise there, in my book. The next “nation” to ban it will be the good ol’ US of A under for-life dictator Donald Trump, or someone more intelligent, more charismatic and more vicious; some reincarnation of Herr Hitler. Once a dictatorship is made official all that the “nation” can do is raise that stiff right arm salute, cry Seig Heil! and die.
LikeLike
As usual, a superb setting-forth of the crisis, Rosaliene. You probably saw the recent polling that suggests that most people are unaware of the indictments and convictions thus far accomplished in the Mueller probe. In light of that, I think one question for us is how to reach those who are not paying attention to many of the most disturbing developments we are facing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Dr. Stein. Reaching those who are not paying attention is indeed a challenge. I believe that one way of achieving this is to support/join those organizations that are on the front-line. The Climate Reality Project and 350.org are two such organizations that I support. There are many others across the US and worldwide. People are becoming more and more engaged. We just don’t hear about it on the mainstream media.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sharing…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Bette 🙂
LikeLike
You’re very welcome, Rosaliene! 🙂 Delighted to share your informational post–reminding us all that we have a part to play in our planet’s future. ❤ Blessings!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Blessings for you, too, Bette ❤
LikeLike
Sheesh! I remember I was trying to be so hopeful about the impact this president would have. I mean, I knew things were gonna get bad, but each day something “silently” horrific that will influence us in multiple ways occurs.
LikeLiked by 1 person
So true, Kathy. We have to remain engaged.
LikeLike
thanks for the weather report!
trying to keep my
own weather pleasant 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for dropping by, David.
Yes, change begins within ourselves and the small space we occupy on Earth.
LikeLike
I don’t understand why these governments behave with irresponsibility towards the environment. We select them for a certain period of time to rule upon us and they always disheartens us by their deeds.
Similarly in India, plastic pollution is at its height, but the government instead of banning it’s production just trying to campaign to spread awareness among people. I don’t say that these campaign are bad. But they are too late and it’s hard to regulate a large country with mere campaigns.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Anurag, thanks for dropping by and sharing news of the situation in India. Indeed, campaigns are not enough. We need action and new regulations.
Thanks, too, for signing up to follow my blog 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent point, Raag Anurag.
LikeLike
Thank you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I guess the problem is the same everywhere: there is no distinction between what we call “emerging countries” and “developing countries”. I have traveled the world for many years, I have always found trash everywhere… From the north to the south, from the east to the west… Forty years ago, but over the measure, nowadays.
Human beings no longer have respect for themselves or for others. They kill other sentient creatures without scruples, the governments (as you say) are limited to sensitization, bland in those countries where the concept of “danger” has not yet crossed the threshold of critical mass. But we need global awareness!
I know that in India, I believe on a Mumbai beach, volunteers acted en masse to clean up tons and tons of plastic debris.
Perhaps this is the right approach, together with the abolition of products that would eventually end up in one way or another in the oceans.
And still, hard to believe, there are people who say that doesn’t exist something called “global warming”…
Sorry to use Rosaliene for my comment…
I wish both serenity :-)claudine
LikeLiked by 1 person
Giovannoni, thanks for dropping by and sharing your worldview. It’s so much easier for some among us to deny climate change since they don’t have to deal with changing the way things are.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Rosaliene, my name is Claudine 🙂
Actually, those who deny will have to get confronted with it one way or another. I follow the Buddhist path and I do believe in reincarnation. There is a great Law called cause-effect and nobody will get along with a bad behavior. Now, in this great chance to be in a human body, we shall do all we can to change the bad things. We must give the example, as you do in such a great manner.
Don’t give up. We are about to reach the “critical mass” :-)claudine
See here, is a little confort.
P. Hawken words…
https://claudinegiovannoni.com/about/siamo-una-moltitudine-inarrestabile/
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Extreme Weather and the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know — Three Worlds One Vision – Green Energy Post
Thanks for sharing my post 🙂
LikeLike
Wow – I hadn’t realized the NOAA’s CMS has been cancelled. I don’t know what to say anymore.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Bruce, it’s been tough staying abreast of all the damages inflicted by our new corporate administration.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Meeting International is elated to invite you to International conference on Earth Science and Climate Change. This will be held on September 6-7, 2018, at Zurich, Switzerland.
For more information go through the link: https://www.meetingsint.com/conferences/earthscience
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Extreme Weather and the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know — Three Worlds One Vision – SEO
Thanks for sharing my post with your readers 🙂
LikeLike
Pingback: Extreme Weather and the Climate Crisis: What You Need to Know — Three Worlds One Vision – Asia health travels