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Dear Alberta: This Flood is Climate Change

by Mike Soron

Photo by Tyler Soron.
Photo by Tyler Soron.

Also posted by edoherty:

Re-posted with permission from SteadyCity.ca.

Early yesterday morning, my dad texted me to say he fled his home in Canmore, Alberta shortly before the town declared a state of emergency. By noon, my brother was told to evacuate his home in Calgary’s Mission District, near the Elbow River. Later, friends near the Calgary Stampede grounds were told to leave their apartment, bringing enough supplies for a week away. As the day went on text messages, and Facebook and Twitter updates chronicled a province in chaos.

As I’m writing this, 18 Calgary neighbourhoods have been evacuated. More than 100,000 people have been forced from their homes. Eight other Alberta communities are under mandatory evacuation orders and 12 have declared states of emergency.

Growing up in Calgary, I remember many floods, heavy rains, hail and tornadoes. But now, these events are more frequent and intense–as climate change models have long said they would be. More directly, the reinsurance company Munich RE told us three years ago: “the only plausible explanation for the rise in weather-related catastrophes is climate change.” Experts are urging journalists to incorporate climate change in their coverage of floods and say any uncertainties about its impact must not delay adapting our communities to a warmer world.

In 2011, climate activist Bill McKibben wrote about severe flooding in Missouri, noting that the disaster wasn’t about the power of nature but about the power of man. McKibben was referring to our extraordinary experiment combusting fossilized energy stored in oil, gas and coal. Combusting these fuels is overheating the planet. For years climatologists have warned that warmer air holds more water than cold air. The result is more snow, winter runoff, and rain. In other words, these Alberta floods are what climate change looks like.

Yes, global warming didn’t cause these floods. Instead, man-made climate change is intensifying flooding and our land use and development practices worsening its impact. It is deeply irresponsible to diminish climate change factors in urban and emergency planning–doing so puts lives and communities at risk.

Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide are emitted from the burning of fossil fuels and these gases keep more energy from the sun in our atmosphere. Adding this energy is like putting the planet on steroids. In performance-enhanced baseball, no single record-breaking home run is directly due to steroid use. But the chances of a powerful hit at bat is far higher. By radically changing the chemical composition of our atmosphere we’ve changed the chances for extreme events like these floods. If we don’t urgently reduce our greenhouse gas emissions we’ll face the consequences of our “juicing” in uninsurable homes, damaged communities, and public expenditure for disaster response.

But don’t take my word for it. Just last month the Insurance Bureau of Canada told Albertans to prepare for more floods and other disasters linked to global-warming. In 2010, the Bureau explicitly linked the rise in flood claims to climate change. Their research director at the time said, “municipal infrastructure has not been designed to withstand what we are experiencing, and that fact that the climate has changed.”

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities urged cities to adapt to climate change:

“For most of the country, the infrastructure is not built for the climate that we are now starting to see… Climate change is on our front steps. It’s in our communities. We see it. We have to adapt. We can’t wait for some global agreement and we can’t just try to reduce greenhouse gas emissions only.”

Just last month, John Pomeroy, the Canada Research Chair in Water Resources and Climate Change told the Calgary Herald:

“[Multi-day rain events] are increasing in their intensity and frequency and we’re fast learning that our roads, our bridges and even some of our towns aren’t any match for the rainfall and the overflow that results.”

Pomeroy pointed in particular to climate-driven flood risk at Canmore’s Cougar Creek–the very creek that forced my father from his home yesterday.

There should be no optimism about the safety and resilience of our communities. As Fatih Birol, chief economist at the International Energy Agency, warned this week, if we let the coal, oil and gas industry implement their business plans, the increase in global temperature would be as high as 5.3 degrees Celsius. Two thirds of all proven fossil fuel reserves need to be left in the ground, he said, to avoid “devastating effects on all of us.”

It’s difficult to even imagine the dangers that a world 5.4 degrees warmer will pose.

What is to be done?

If you live in Alberta, obviously focus today on the immediate safety of your family and neighbours. But after the waters recede and the dehumidifiers are returned, do not forget this catastrophe.

Call your city councillors, MPs, and MLAs and insist they act urgently to repair and upgrade our infrastructure and continually develop climate change adaptation plans. Acknowledge that preparing for and responding to climate emergencies requires collective action and we need taxes to fund it. Governments are being starved of urgently needed resources to protect our communities by corrupted elected officials, harmful memes about austerity and deficit reduction, and aggressive tax avoidance by global corporations and the super-rich. We must immediately price carbon pollution and eliminate fossil fuel subsidies, then put these funds to work protecting our communities.

And most importantly–and I understand that this will be very difficult for many Albertans to hear–we must leave two-thirds of proven fossil fuel reserves in the ground and immediately stop exploring for new oil, gas, and coal deposits. The first rule of holes is that when you’re in one, stop digging.

Alberta’s flood emergency will soon pass; the global state of emergency won’t. Climate change is the emergency we’ll be dealing with for the rest of our lives. Albertans must quickly wake up to the dangers of climate change.

 

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Commentaires

Even BUSH didn't condemn my kids to the greenhouse gas ovens!

Some day uttering CO2 death threats of an exaggerated CO2 climate crisis to billions of helpless children will be considered a real WAR crime! Who is the neocon again here?

Before you remaining believers grunt out another headline of consensus at least take the time to know what’s behind the headline:
In 28 years of intensive research (almost all was into effects not causes) into their CO2 climate crisis the world of science has only agreed that it was; "real and happening" and have NEVER said it WILL be, only COULD BE a crisis. Deny that and if “could be” is a good enough reason to condemn your own children to a catastrophic climate crisis………………………..you didn’t love the planet, you just hated humanity itself.
Find us one single IPCC warning that says a real crisis will really happen, just one.
Find us one single IPCC warning not swimming in maybes and could bes and likelys and possiblys..
Science didn’t lie, the scientists just rode the back of a 28 year old “maybe” crisis that only proved that it “won’t be” a real crisis. It was you climate blame believers and lazy copy and paste news editors and pandering politicians that lied and said the scientists agreed it WILL be a crisis.
So how close to unstoppable warming will science lead us to before they say their REAL crisis is as REAL as they love to say comet hits are? Science could end the debate instantly just by saying a real crisis will happen not just “could” happen.
Deny that!

Exact Science?

I don't think the issue is the scientific process ... it deals in probabilities and stresses uncertainty and lack of consensus for important reasons. The thing is, you've got this huge diverse international group of honest researchers having a proper discussion (much of which isn't very accessible to people who don't speak science) and along comes the corporate energy goliaths with their mercenary demagogues and their gold-plated propaganda machines and drowns everything with noise and lies.

I mean, most of the commercials you see for the pipelines and the tarsands seem to be targeting complete-idiots-only. Saying stuff like "Our oil tankers have double hulls so it's cool." As if that wasn't already mandatory for 30 years ... That's like the logging industry saying "We put brakes on our trucks so they can stop." It's fucking ridiculous!

It's not about winning an argument people, if you're still trapped at the "discussion stage" then they're winning because they'll just keep spamming the airwaves with their lies for idiots while the world burns.

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