Sunday, April 14, 2024

Melting Arctic Reminds Me of Pompeii in 79 AD

Pompeii Garden of the Fugitives 02
"Pompeii Garden of the Fugitives" by Lancevortex, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Reading climate.nasa.gov's 2022 "Key Takeaway: Summer Arctic sea ice extent is shrinking by 12.2% per decade due to warmer temperatures," and recalling President Niinistö of Finland in Joint Press Conference with President Trump, August 28, 2017, “If we lose the Arctic, we lose the globe,” I wrote a new poem below. To clarify the problem, visit Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S)'s Climate Pulse (click "Sea temperature"), and see Dave Borlace's Just Have a Think April 7, 2019 video Blue Ocean Event : Game Over? (325,412 views).

Day Before Mt. Vesuvius Erupted

 

“Pliny the Younger, author of the only surviving written testimony,

described the morning before the eruption as normal.” -- wikipedia.org

 

Schoolkid challenged teacher,

“What makes you think

you know anything

about anything?”

 

Teacher fired back,

“What makes you think

you know something

about something?”

 

“I know everyone here

will die tomorrow,”

he whispered

to derisive laughter.

 

“You do?” asked teacher.

“Who told you?”

“A bird,” he said.

“What kind?”

 

“Dream bird.”

There was more laughter,

except louder

as teacher joined in.

 

By next night

all laughing were dead.

Blog readers curious about dangers of speed of melting Arctic may want to see my February 7, 2019 post "Arctic Methane Debate Rages On" in which Dahr Jamail noted in a video I included, "[Dr. Ira Leifer, Chemical Engineering Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, noted] the normal background rate for methane seeps from a seabed in that area is approximately 3000 methane seeps over a thousand square kilometer area. He had, using satellites to measure the methane, [ . . .] found in another thousand square kilometer area, [. . .] there were already 60 million methane seeps [ . . .]" [par break] "Leifer was 'chief mission coordinating scientist for the NASA effort for airborne remote sensing of the Gulf oil spill.'"

Okay, here is where things get weird. I went to write the above paragraph, and this part was deleted by someone: "found in another thousand square kilometer area, [. . .] there were already 60 million methane seeps." I am not joking, and I am not "seeing things," as I asked another writer to verify the deleted part. I took screen shots to verify. One would think Google, owner of Blogger, would care about its reputation enough to protect blog content, but it seems Google did not in this case. It's possible there is another explanation, like AI deleting duplicate content since I also mentioned "60 million methane seeps" in my October 11, 2019 post "The Moscow Times Reports East Siberian Sea Methane Emissions 'Up to Nine Times the Global Average.'" However, if that's the case, why did Google reinsert my "60 million methane seeps" text into the original post after I opened what I wrote on Blogger? I don't know, and this is the first surprise-deletion I noticed in over 10 years of writing this Trees, Fish, and Dreams Climateblog.

Maybe this blog, and others like it, will be deleted by Google if content -- even accurate content -- doesn't meet official propaganda requirements -- or AI or company coding -- as the climate emergency worsens. 

I'm grateful for 35,000 pageviews in the past 12 months, mostly from the U. S., Singapore, and Hong Kong. I'm grateful for over 150,000 pageviews since about August 2013. I am grateful maybe someone in power considers my blog content dangerous enough to delete part of it that could possibly scare people into collective nonviolent action. I am grateful in 1987 Robert Bly came to visit Tom Ferte's literature class when I was a student at Western Oregon State College (now Western Oregon University), and Bly said, "The trees will carry what we don't say."  so if my blog is deleted you can go to forests to listen.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

Bad News for Emperor Penguins, Fish, Seals, and Whales in Antarctica; Good News for Climate Activists at U. S. Supreme Court

Bad News for Emperor Penguins, Fish, Seals, and Whales in Antarctica

Yesterday The Guardian Science Editor Robin McKie reported, "‘Simply mind-boggling’: world record temperature jump in Antarctic raises fears of catastrophe -- An unprecedented leap of 38.5C in the coldest place on Earth is a harbinger of a disaster for humans and the local ecosystem."  McKie quoted Prof. Michael Meredith, science leader at the British Antarctic Survey, “In sub-zero temperatures such a massive leap is tolerable but if we had a 40C rise in the UK now that would take temperatures for a spring day to over 50C [122° Fahrenheit]– and that would be deadly for the population.” 

Glaciologist Prof. Martin Siegert, of the University of Exeter, was also quoted, "No one in our community thought that anything like this could ever happen [ . . . . ]" I have been reading that several times in the past three years. For example, my October 26, 2021 post "Rethinking Weather Forecasts" noted, "Recently, a professor of statistics at my college said the probability of 115 F (46 C) in Seattle before June 2021 was zero, but it happened. He added at the time there were better odds buying one lottery ticket, and winning."

A photo caption in McKie's article noted, "Thousands of emperor penguin chicks drowned last year when the sea-ice broke up before they could fully fledge." The article quoted Prof. Kate Hendry, a chemical oceanographer based at the British Antarctic Survey, "If krill starts to disappear in the wake of algae, then all sorts of disruption to the food chain will occur." McKie noted, "A critical example is provided by the algae which grow under and around sea ice in west Antarctica. This is starting to disappear, with very serious implications, added Hendry. Algae is eaten by krill, the tiny marine crustaceans that are one of the most abundant animals on Earth and which provide food for predators that include fish, penguins, seals and whales."

My October 26, 2021 post included: "121.2 Fahrenheit (49.6°C) air temperature in Lytton, BC June 29, 2021 shattering records. Dr. Jason Box was quoted, 'That's basically unlivable, at least for nature. [ . . . .] We have to prepare [for] extreme disruptions to our lives.'"  The post also mentioned "More than one billion marine intertidal animals [ . . . ] may have perished along the shores of the Salish Sea during the record temperatures at the end of June, [2021] said University of British Columbia researcher Chris Harley," and "a heat wave that "killed or harmed three billion animals" in Australia according to a July 28, 2020 bbc.com news article," and a "California family found dead on hike killed by extreme heat, sheriff says." [. . . .] "What next?"

Good News for Climate Activists at U. S. Supreme Court

Surprisingly, news reports in the past year noted U. S. cities and states have consistently won battles with Big Oil to keep climate-impact lawsuits out of federal courts, where they are more likely to lose, and in state courts where they are more likely to win. April 26, 2023, Kate Yoder wrote at Grist.org, "The Supreme Court just unleashed a flood of lawsuits against Big Oil." Yoder noted, "Nearly two dozen lawsuits filed by cities and states aim to put fossil fuel companies on trial for deceiving the public about climate change." [ . . . . ] "On Monday [April 24, 2023], the justices rejected petitions from Chevron, Shell, BP, and other oil companies to move these cases from the state courts where they were filed to federal courts, an arena considered more friendly to the industry. The Supreme Court’s rejection brings an end to a long jurisdictional battle, meaning that cases in Colorado, Maryland, California, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and more can finally proceed — potentially toward jury trials." 

Yoder quoted Richard Wiles, president of The Center for Climate Integrity, "It’s the industry’s worst nightmare to have to explain their lies in front of a jury." 

Ella Nilsen reported at cnn.com January 8, 2024, "Supreme Court declines to weigh in on Minnesota’s climate lawsuit against big oil companies." Nilsen wrote regarding these legal battles, "Two of these cases, one from Massachusetts and one from Honolulu city and county, could go to trial as soon as 2025."

C.J. Polychroniou's April 19, 2023 truthout.org interview with economist Gregor Semieniuk noted more challenges for Big Oil and its investors in the article "What Would It Take to Defeat Big Oil? A Progressive Economist Weighs In." Polychroniou wrote, "On March 29, [2023] Semieniuk testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on the Budget during a hearing on '[ . . .] The Cost of Oil Dependence in a Low-Carbon World.' In his testimony, he discussed his 2022 research that found that current oil and gas assets may be overvalued by more than $1 trillion, a figure that exceeds the subprime housing mispricing that triggered the 2007 financial crisis."

Semieniuk was quoted, "We calculate that some $400 billion in potentially stranded assets could be sitting on U.S. financial business balance sheets. That’s 30 percent of the global total, and $100 billion more than the stranded assets at production sites in the U.S., because both U.S. oil companies and their financial investors invest in oil and gas production and oil and gas companies abroad. And they invest on behalf of ultimate owners: holders of retirement plans, often invested via pension funds, and the affluent at the top of the distribution, that have a lot of financial wealth to invest. [ . . . .]"

Avalon Zoppo's December 20, 2023 law.com article "Circuit Consensus: Climate Claim Suits Against Big Oil Belong in State Courts" may explain why federal courts decided against Big Oil in the venue matter, and are likely to do so in the future. Zoppo wrote, "The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has become the latest federal appellate court to deliver a procedural loss for major energy companies in lawsuits accusing them of deceiving consumers about their products’ effects on climate change. [par break] A three-judge panel Tuesday sent the District of Columbia’s lawsuit against Exxon Mobil, Shell, BP and Chevron back to state court, holding that the complaint relies solely on D.C.’s Consumer Protection Procedures Act and is not preempted—as the companies argued—by federal common law of interstate air pollution."

Zoppo quoted Judge Neomi Rao for a three-judge panel including Gregory Katsas and Florence Pan, "In the Clean Air Act, Congress displaced federal common law through comprehensive regulation, but it did not completely preempt state law, nor did it provide an independent basis for removal, as it has done in many other statutes.”

Zoppo wrote, "Rao added in a footnote that almost every other federal appeals court has come to the same conclusion in litigation other state governments have brought against oil and gas companies alleging the concealment of fossil fuel products’ harm to the environment. [par break] She cited cases in the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Eighth, Ninth and Tenth circuits. The Second Circuit, for instance, sent a similar case back to state court in September that Connecticut brought against Exxon under the state’s Unfair Trade Practices Act."

Therefore, it seems Big Oil is headed the way of Big Tobacco, but this may not be soon enough for many coastal cities and island nations facing sea rise, and many humans and nonhumans facing deadly heat, droughts, and floods. 

Reversal in Big Oil's political power reminds me of actor Russell Crowe's Mississippi deposition scene as the character Jeffrey Wigand in the 1999 film The Insider, and the 60 Minutes 1996 Mike Wallace interview with actual Jeffrey Wigand that led to the film. 

My March 4, 2024 post "Same Planet, Different Worlds" notes, "The [March 4, 2024 article by Dharna Noor and Oliver Milman at The Guardian "Fury after Exxon chief says public to blame for climate failures"] also quoted Naomi Oreskes, [Harvard University] Henry Charles Lea Professor of the History of Science, and Affiliated Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 'For decades, they told us that the science was too uncertain to justify action, that it was premature to act, and that we could and should wait and see how things developed. Now the CEO says: oh dear, we've waited too long. If this isn't gaslighting, I don't know what it is.' She added, 'The playbook is this: sell consumers a product that you know is dangerous, while publicly denying or downplaying those dangers. Then, when the dangers are no longer deniable, deny responsibility and blame the consumer.'"

Monday, April 1, 2024

21st Century Man

In reversal of Abraham Lincoln's famous words, here is my quote for 21st Century Man:

“Die when I may, I want it said of me by those who knew me best, that I always plucked a flower and planted a thistle where I thought a thistle would grow.”

I thought of this when I read how COP28 President, Dr. Sultan Al Jaber's "UAE Consensus [which included] an unprecedented reference to transitioning away from all fossil fuels in energy systems [ . . . ] to reach net zero emissions by 2050, in keeping with the science" was challenged by Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser, as quoted by Spencer Kimball in a March 19, 2024 cnbcafrica.com article, "We should abandon the fantasy of phasing out oil and gas and instead invest in them adequately reflecting realistic demand assumptions.” According to the article, he said this March 18, 2024, at "CERAWeek by S&P Global energy conference in Houston, Texas." I found the issue in Bill McKibben's Substack The Crucial Years March 26, 2024, post "2100, and before," and saw it in Dan Gearino's March 28, 2024 Inside Climate News report, "An Oil Company Executive Said the Energy Transition Has Failed. What’s Really Happening?"

Obviously, Nasser doesn't agree with Dr. Sultan Al Jaber's quote at the close of COP28, "The world needed to find a new way. By following our North Star, we have found that path.” Gearino was less kind than me, noting, "[Nasser's] reasoning verges on nihilism, declaring defeat on behalf of the governments, businesses and other organizations that are working to reduce the damage that the oil industry has helped to cause. It’s also bad for business and the economy, like telling Henry Ford in about 1910 that cars had failed to transform the market, so focus on improving horses and carriages." Gearino added, "I thought of the years I worked for newspapers and the way corporate executives talked about the industry’s bright future. This involved highlighting the good numbers and downplaying the bad ones, and focusing on how the product was indispensable. [par break] The executives’ optimism made me feel a little better in the moment, but they were, of course, wrong."

Gratefully, abrupt climate policy reversals can go the other way too like when Rockefeller Brothers Fund in 2014 announced divestment from "coal, oil, and gas." Bill McKibben's article "Climate fight won't wait for Paris: vive la résistance" March 9, 2015, in The Guardian, noted "As the head of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund put it, 'We are quite convinced that if John D Rockefeller were alive today, as an astute businessman looking out to the future, he would be moving out of fossil fuels and investing in clean, renewable energy.' This is the rough equivalent of the Pope appearing at his Vatican window in saffron robes to tell the crowd below he’s now a Hare Krishna, or Richard Dawkins showing up at Lourdes in a bathing suit."

Similarly, Melissa Godin reported January 15, 2020, in a time.com article, "James Murdoch Criticizes His Father’s Media Empire Over Climate Crisis Denial," "James Murdoch has spoken out against his father Rupert’s media outlets for their 'ongoing denial' of the climate crisis as bushfires continue to ravage Australia. [par break] In a joint statement with his wife Kathryn, the couple expressed frustration with News Corp and Fox News’ coverage of the fires. 'They are particularly disappointed with the ongoing denial among the news outlets in Australia given the obvious evidence to the contrary,' a spokesperson for the couple told The Daily Beast."

In my December 18, 2017 post "Just Fight It (Climate Breakdown)" I wrote, "ask parents, uncles, aunts, mayors, governors, senators, representatives, priests, pastors, other religious leaders, and elders what they have done to reduce carbon." Imagine Jesus overturning tables of moneychangers in Matthew 21:12-13, or Roger Daltrey singing in 1978, and ask 'When it comes to the war between Big Oil and Life on Earth, 'Who Are You [?]'" None of us are here long so it should be clear exactly who we are.

My favorite recent item is Climate Pulse, "a new interactive web application developed and maintained by the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) to make climate monitoring more accessible to a broad audience. This page provides daily charts and maps of global surface air temperature and sea surface temperature updated close to real-time, as well as an archive of past daily, monthly and annual maps."

I'm grateful my recent climate poems have been accepted by Clackamas Literary Review, Salmon Creek Journal at Washington State University Vancouver, and Panorama: The Journal of Travel, Place, and Nature in Cambridge, and London, UK.