Everybody’s Talking (’bout my Global Warming)

A year and a half-ago, we had two weeks of hard rain in Southern California where I live, totaling about twenty inches, followed by a storm burst on the morning of January 10th.

Here’s what the stream where I live looked like like the day before the storm burst.

The_stream_before_the_storm

Then came the storm, with no less than six inches of rain in a little over two hours.

The flood that followed closed the little state highway I live on in one direction for nearly six months, and devastated my property. We’re still putting the pieces back together.

Naturally, I suspected global warming might have had a hand in this, what with the "intensification of the hydrological cycle" that one study from the US Global Climate Research Program for this region predicted back in 2003. Another study estimated a likelihood of stronger El Ninos, and rainstorms  5-10% wetter. (Because higher temps lead to more evaporation lead to more moisture lead to wetter storms, the effect should be quantifiable, within probable ranges.)

But interestingly, experts such as my equaintance/friend Bill Patzert at JPL/NASA, who knows a great deal about global warming, nonetheless did not name it as a cause for the January 2005 storms. Bill pointed instead to a "jetstream on steroids" with "wild fluctuations north and south."

And my neighbors too, were quiet. I think most of my neighbors accept the reality of global warming, having noticed one effect or another (fewer frosts, for example), but to my surprise, global warming was a conservation killer when I alluded to it and the storms together.   

"Just too much water," one hard-hit guy my age said. ‘We had just too much water for us to take."

Partly, I think, the reluctance to talk about it came out of seeing so many ripped-out trees, tumbled vehicles, torn-up roads, and mud-soaked houses. No one wanted to "vent" on the subject; after all, in La Conchita, ten people died in that storm. (For a sense of what that felt like, see this excellent story from T.C. Boyle called La Conchita.)

I told people that it felt Biblical. Sometimes they’d nod and sometimes they’d laugh, but nobody I can recall doubted me on that.

Back on the East Coast, the same concept came up regarding the recent storms that swamped the Capitol. (See the Tom Toles post below.)

Only one report that I know of linked these deadly storms to global warming, by Bill Blakemore of ABC News.

And just as my neighbors didn’t much want to talk about it, nor reporters, neither did the ordinary people in the Mid-Atlantic region, according to the NYTimes [$].

Right or left, the politics don’t seem to matter.

Lefties are probably more willing to speculate in disaster; righties probably more willing to accept that the universe can turn against us at any moment.

But most people I encounter, regardless of their politics, don’t really want to talk about it.

I don’t think this mutual reticence is ill-intentioned.

On the contrary, I think it comes out of a respectful wariness. As the Times Editorial said: 

There is no minimizing the deaths or the damage, but these storms have affected most people on a more mundane level. In parts of New England there is almost a grim refusal to talk about the weather, as if it has all been said already and proven useless. Anyone who works outside for a living — gardeners, painters, contractors — has more or less used up a year’s supply of stoicism already, with most of the summer still ahead of them.

But, fascinatingly, the reticence to talk about global warming in polite company has been utterly reversed in print, where all sorts of writers and thinkers are going at the subject with vigor.

I’m sorry it had to come to this, but the writing in the last couple of months from not the usual experts has been original, surprising, sometimes even dazzling. 

See below for examples from a couple of boys from Harvard, the sociologist Robert Puttnam, author of "Bowling Alone," and Daniel Gilbert, a psychologist who recently published a book called "Stumbling on Happiness."

I expect this type of item will become a regular feature; I hope all these good pieces go straight to the top of the opinion leader charts.

Thinking Ahead on Climate Change Over There: Falling Behind Over Here

If you take a look at media stories and scientific blogs from the UK on the subject of climate change, you cannot help but notice how much further down the road the Brits can see than Americans. Here in this country, for example, righties are a-tizzy over a column by Robert Samuelson calling current attemptsContinue reading “Thinking Ahead on Climate Change Over There: Falling Behind Over Here”

It’s an Ill Wind…

According to Dr. Jeff Masters’ Wunderblog, the same jet stream pattern that helped bring record-breaking storms to the East Coast will probably break up potential hurricanes along the Gulf Coast. This jet stream pattern should act to keep wind shear high over the main breeding grounds for July tropical cyclones–the Gulf of Mexico, Bahamas, andContinue reading “It’s an Ill Wind…”

Sunday Morning on the Planet (Lex Luthor Returns edition)

The glory of movies is their grandeur, their bigness, their desire to tell a story they think the whole world should want to hear. This grandiosity is also their failing, admittedly. The new "Superman Returns" movie turns heavy and stilted towards the end, trying to convince us that the Man of Steel could actually die.Continue reading “Sunday Morning on the Planet (Lex Luthor Returns edition)”

Gore Moves the Needle in the Global Warming Debate

When An Inconvenient Truth first came out, I saw it and (like most who have seen it) really liked it, and talked about it with my friend Nomi Morris.

Nomi, being a long-term reporter, asked exactly the right question: Do you think it will move the debate?

Well, that it has. Here’s the evidence.

For one, the movie has greatly exceeded expectations. A couple of months ago, for example, sharp-witted box office maven David Poland, who runs a site called Movie City News, called Al Gore’s feature "boring" and estimated it would gross about 6-7 million. But the documentary has already grossed close to $10 million, according to Variety [$], and will surpass "Supersize Me," which grossed $11.5 million. Variety projects that:

Assuming "Truth" continues to play at least in major markets throughout the summer, as Paramount Vantage is hoping, it seems to be on track to end up close to the tally of "Bowling for Columbine," which cumed $21.6 million.

The paper goes on to predict that it will play even better overseas, as is usually the case with movies these days, which would put in the $40 million ballpark…a monster hit for a documentary.

But it’s not just the box office numbers. As Martin Peretz, publisher of The New Republic, points out, the paperback version of "An Inconvenient Truth," which some critics consider even better than the movie, will be number one on the major bestseller lists this Sunday. And the success of the book shows that the message is getting through.

It’s no longer a question of: Is Global Warming Happening?

The question now is: What Will Global Warming Mean?

Algorebyedsorel

 

Bush Administration to Salmon, Fisherman: Drop Dead

The salmon industry on the West Coast is dying. The Bush administration–and Karl Rove in particular, as this story from the Wall Street Journal shows–helped kill it. For more on what happened and what is happening, including pictures and audio links, see this great story from Mother Jones a couple of months ago. But what’sContinue reading “Bush Administration to Salmon, Fisherman: Drop Dead”