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Atmospheric CO² Jan 1959 – Jan 2024, City of Los Angeles/California, Climate Change, Climate Crisis, EU Copernicus Global Climate Highlights 2023, Fossil Fuel Emissions, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), NCEI/NOAA Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, NOAA Mauna Loa Observatory, NOAA/NASA 2023 Global Climate Media Briefing, Pineapple Express Atmospheric River, US 2023 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters Map

Photo Credit: David Crane / Associated Press
The sun is out again. Alleluia! Beginning last Sunday and throughout Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the Pineapple Express atmospheric river unloaded its burden across California. Don’t get me wrong: We need the rain to replenish our state’s depleted reservoirs after years of drought. Is it asking too much not to have the rain all at once? Consider downtown Los Angeles. Within just four days, the area was drenched with more than 8 inches (20 cm) of rain. That’s more than half of the area’s normal annual rainfall of 14.25 inches (36 cm).
We were well warned ahead of the onslaught. To ensure our city had the required resources to respond to the storm’s impacts, on Monday, February 5th, our Mayor Karen Bass signed a Declaration of Local Emergency throughout the City of Los Angeles. Flooding, fallen trees, and hundreds of mudslides were merciless to everything and everyone in their path. I give thanks that our neighborhood was spared from such devastating blows. At our apartment complex, the lawn and garden plots are fully saturated. Some plants thrive in such weather. Others, like some of my succulents, not so much.
Extreme climate change events have become more frequent and severe. How the gods must laugh at human ineptitude in connecting the dots between our behavior and our environment! We can no longer have it all. Yet, we persist in our self-destructive ways of being and doing. Drill, Baby, Drill!
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