When we see records being broken and unprecedented events such as this, the onus is on those who deny any connection to climate change to prove their case. Global warming has fundamentally altered the background conditions that give rise to all weather. In the strictest sense, all weather is now connected to climate change. Kevin Trenberth
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Fracking industry puppets spew obscene lies in Colorado while people drown
As Colorado endures a slow-motion disaster,
so-called "regulators" are in total denial -- while lives are at stake
by David Sirota, Salon, September 18, 2013
EnlargeFloodwaters inundate a street in Loveland, Colo., on Monday, Sept. 16, 2013. (Credit: AP/Chris Schneider)
Two
months before my community and so many others were overwhelmed this week
by epic rains, our state’s chief oil and gas regulator, Matt Lepore,
appeared onstage in nearby Loveland with representatives of the fossil
fuel industry. During that event, Lepore — an industry-lawyer-turned-public-official — proceeded to berate
citizens concerned about the ecological impact of fracking and
unbridled drilling. More specifically, he insisted that those asking
fossil fuel development to be governed by the precautionary principle are mostly affluent and therefore unconcerned with the economic impact of their environmentalism.
Ignoring public polling data
that documented the broad support for tougher environmental regulation,
Lepore was making the classic populist argument against the
precautionary principle. In this instance, an industry puppet: 1)
pretended environmental stewardship is merely a luxury for those
fortunate enough to be able to afford it; and 2) insinuated that a lack
of such stewardship primarily harms the sensibilities of rich folk, but
not much else.
Today, parts of the same city where Lepore delivered his diatribe remain inundated. Same thing for “thousands of oil and gas wells and associated condensate tanks and ponds,” according to the Boulder Daily Camera.
Already, there is at least one confirmed oil pipeline leak. At the same time, the Denver Post
reports that “oil drums, tanks and other industrial debris mixed into
the swollen (South Platte) river.” Some of this has been caught on
camera, as harrowing photos
of partially submerged oil and gas sites now hit the Internet. It all
suggests that there’s a very real possibility of a slow-motion
environmental disaster, one whose potential damage to water supplies,
spread of carcinogenic chemicals and contamination of agricultural land
should concern both rich and poor.
In retrospect, then, the flood powerfully illustrates the problem with officials like Lepore (who later apologized)
pretending that environmental stewardship and the precautionary
principle are just aristocratic priorities. They are, in fact, quite the
opposite: They are priorities for everyone and if those priorities have
any class implications at all, those implications disproportionately
involve the middle and lower classes.
That,
though, is only one of the big lessons from the Colorado flood. Another
is the lesson that in the age of climate change and severe weather,
geographic distance and the old “out of sight, out of mind” defense
mechanism should no longer provide psychological comfort to anyone.
There
are, of course, plenty of ways to illustrate that larger point. You can
simply consider how carbon emissions — whether from faraway China or
remote Wyoming — affect the entire planet’s temperature and weather. Alternately, you can look at 2011 photos of a flooded nuclear power station in Nebraska,
and then imagine how big a blast zone a Fukushima might create if one
happened in the center of the country. Or, just consider my family’s own
microcosmic experience during the floods here in the square state.
Living
in southeast Denver, we were worried about Cherry Creek overflowing
into our neighborhood, which, thankfully, it didn’t. So we experienced
the natural inclination to view this Thousand-Year Flood
as imposing merely a minor set of inconveniences — a mixup of the lawn
mowing schedule, mud tracks into the house, wet dog walks, and overgrown
weeds, but not much else. Similarly, we felt the tug of the “out of
sight, out of mind” psychology — the kind that encourages you to simply
ignore the damage just a few miles away. During emergencies, such a
defense mechanism is particularly reassuring because it allows you to
lament damage to roads and homes, but to also tell yourself that there’s
nothing to personally worry about because you are at a safe distance
from that destruction.
The
amount by which this (flood) event has exceeded past events suggests
that manmade warming may have played some role by making the event worse
than it would have otherwise been … An increase in the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation events is expected to take place even though annual precipitation amounts are projected to decrease in the Southwest …
Although the overall climate of the Southwest may become drier over the
coming decades, a greater proportion of the rain that does fall could
be in the form of heavy precipitation events.
So
sure, while we initially felt we could breathe a little easy this time
around, we know that there will almost certainly be a next time around,
and that when that time comes, we may not be so fortunate. Meanwhile,
this time around, we may not actually end up so fortunate after all.
Why?
Because we live in a state where the fossil fuel industry’s “drill and
frack first, ask questions later” attitude reigns supreme, and that
means the flood has raised the prospect of major spills and leaks. In
practice, that could translate into widespread consequences for us and
everyone on the Front Range — consequences that could be as severe as
destruction of personal property. We’re talking water contamination,
food contamination and all sorts of other exposure to toxins. That kind
of thing can, to say the least, create long-term health hazards well
after homes and roads have been rebuilt.
Our experience wasn’t out
of the ordinary or special. It was entirely typical for many people
living on the edges of the disaster zones in Colorado, just as it is
typical for lots of people living near those zones during other
cataclysms. Those experiences all lead to a conclusion best summed up by
an old cliché: When it comes to something as monumental as climate
change, you can run, but you can’t hide. That conclusion should
consequently lead to another cliché: Whether we like it or not, and no
matter where we live, we here on Spaceship Earth are all in this
together. And the good news is that there are some pretty basic,
nonpartisan, non-ideological things that can be done, even beyond the
immense task of trying to reduce climate change-exacerbating carbon
emissions.
At the state and local level, environmental regulators
can stop behaving like de facto lobbyists for ecologically hazardous
industries; legislators can pass — rather than reject
— necessary proposals to tighten oil and gas regulations; siting
authorities can employ the “first do no harm” idea before permitting
more energy development in areas like floodplains; and local officials
can be given more power to oversee the fossil fuel industry within their
midst. Most important, all of them can finally reject climate change
denialism and begin factoring in meteorological reality when making
energy development decisions.
That last necessity is where the federal government can play a special role. As a recent Government Accountability Office report
documents, state and local “decision makers have not systematically
considered climate change in infrastructure planning.” According to the
report, fixing that problem requires “the federal government to improve
local decision makers’ access to the best available (climate-related)
information to use in infrastructure planning.” It stands to reason that
when public officials are armed with such information, there’s at least
a better chance that they will make more sound decisions — such as,
say, opting against permitting $4 billion worth of oil and gas rigs in a flood-prone basin.
Now,
sure, you can roll your eyes and come up with some inane logic to
reassure yourself that you personally have nothing to worry about.
That’s the easy thing to do, because then you don’t have to deal with
any fear. But when many of the solutions are so straightforward and when
the consequences of inaction are so severe, is that really prudent?
There’s are thousands of flooded oil and gas rigs here in Colorado that
suggest it isn’t.
David Sirota is a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist,
magazine journalist and the best-selling author of the books "Hostile
Takeover," "The Uprising" and "Back to Our Future." E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.
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