[✔️] March 17, 2023- Global Warming News Digest | Cyclone Freddy, Hollywood tries, SVB bank, tell the EPA, UW paleo-catastrophe, Apple TV, Texas censors school textbooks, water 9 years ago.
R.Pauli
Richard at CredoandScreed.com
Fri Mar 17 10:22:35 EDT 2023
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/*March 17, 2023*/
/[Mess and deaths from major storm that is setting records ]/
*Cyclone 'Freddy' batters Malawi and Mozambique*
Cai Nebe with reporting from Miriam Kaliza in Malawi
March 16, 2023
Hundreds of people have been killed as tropical cyclone Freddy continues
its trail of destruction.
Authorities fear more casualities could emerge in the coming days as
residents in southern Malawi and Mozambique pick through the debris
caused by tropical cyclone Freddy.
Close to 400 deaths have been reported in Mozambique, Malawi and
Madagascar. Officials believe at least 88,000 have been heavily affected
by the record-breaking storm. To shelter the displaced, 165 camps have
been set up in Malawi.
*Three days of hell*
The destruction was at its worst in the days since Monday and especially
so in southern Malawi which has seen power blackouts and a shortage of
running water. To make matters worse, damaged roads and washed away
bridges have hampered rescue efforts.
The death toll in Malawi stands at at least 326, while Mozambique said
more than 50 people had died. Madagascan authorities reported at least
27 deceased. The combined death toll is expected to rise...
- -
Over 35 days, it has travelled 8,000 kilometers over land and the Indian
Ocean, leaving a trail of destruction. It first hit land in Madagascar,
then moved on to Mozambique, before circling back over the warm waters
of the Mozambican Channel.
It then gained even more strength and crashed back into southern Africa,
hitting Mozambique's Zambezia, Niassa and Sofala provinces and Malawi
with winds speeds of up to 200 kilometers per hour. Scientists say
human-caused climate change has made cyclone activity more intense and
frequent over the past years...
- -
As the storm fades, disaster management services are concerned that the
prevalence of water-borne diseases could increase, as clean water is
scarce in the affected areas. Malawi was already battling a cholera
outbreak before the cyclone.
https://www.dw.com/en/record-breaking-cyclone-freddy-batters-malawi-and-mozambique/a-64997827
- -
/[ Record weather event is Cyclone Freddy - all sorts of records
smashed - it may not be done ]/
*Frigging Cyclone Freddy Blew Up Many Records - Duration; Accumulated
Energy, Intensification Cycles…*
Paul Beckwith
Mar 16, 2023
Believe it or not:
- Cyclone Freddy was the longest duration cyclone in history,
running from Feb 6th to March 11th
- Freddy had the largest Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) on record.
In fact if you add up all of the ACE values for all the hurricanes
in an average full season in the North Atlantic together, the sum is
less than Freddy’s ACE. What??? Yes, really…
- Freddy broke the world record for the most bouts of rapid
intensification, defined as an increase in wind speed of 35 miles
per hour (30 knots) in a period of 24 hours. Freddy had seven
separate cycles of rapid intensification. The previous record was 4
in the northern hemisphere and 3 in the southern hemisphere
- Freddy formed off the coast of Australia, crossed the entire
southern Indian Ocean and travelled more than 8000 km (4,970 miles)
to make landfall in Madagascar and Mozambique.
Only four storms have crossed the southern Indian Ocean from east to
west
- Freddy is one of the deadliest storms in Southern Africa, and the
death toll is about 400 and rising (270 number in video has been
updated)
- the sea surface temperature (SST) across the entire path of Freddy
was mostly over 28.5 C, and we know that anything over the threshold
of 26.5 C leads to amplification of tropical storms
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYWFn68pMYM
- -
/[ global tool for viewing weather ]/
*Earth Null School -- *a visualization of global weather conditions
forecast by supercomputers
updated every three hours
ocean surface current estimates updated every five days
ocean surface temperatures and anomaly from daily average (1981-2011)
updated daily
https://earth.nullschool.net/
/[ Hollywood Reporter ]/
*‘Extrapolations’ Review: Meryl Streep and Kit Harington Lead Starry but
Stodgy Apple TV+ Climate Change Drama*
Edward Norton, Marion Cotillard and Daveed Diggs also appear in these
eight interconnected stories about the future of our environment, from
creator Scott Z. Burns ('Contagion').
BY ANGIE HAN
MARCH 15, 2023 8
In the opening minutes of Apple TV+’s Extrapolations, a young
environmental activist (Yara Shahidi) prepares to make a speech about
the need for action on climate change. As she waits for the cameras to
go live, an associate casually asks if she needs anything. Her
not-at-all casual response: “For people to listen.”
Thus the tone is set for the rest of the series: serious, heavy and
mostly lacking in nuance. The urgency of its message is self-evidently
important enough that no expense has been spared in delivering it. The
cast is star-studded, and the production design lavish. But all this
gravitas comes at the expense of the human characters who should be at
the center of its stories, turning the series into a well-intentioned
but mostly dry series of discussions...
- -
But Extrapolations’ awareness of its own import works against it more
than for it, yielding characters who come across less like human beings
than mouthpieces for political debates or mournful speeches. A storyline
about Marshall, a rabbi (Daveed Diggs) trying to save his Miami temple
from rising water levels, plays like an excuse for Marshall and an angry
young congregant (Neska Rose) to engage in lengthy philosophical
arguments about the sins of man. Another, about a scientist (Sienna
Miller) attempting to save what might be the last humpback whale on
Earth, threatens to buckle under the weight of its own metaphors —
though that one does at least drop in the incredible detail that
apparently, we’ll have the technology to casually chat with whales by
the year 2046...
- -
More often, though, Extrapolations seems to work backwards, starting
with a development it wants to show us or a technology it wants to
consider or conversation it wants to have, and slapping together thinly
conceived characters to act them out. “The problem is us. Always has
been,” a character muses in the finale. “We did this to the planet, to
ourselves, to each other.” Extrapolations grasps perfectly well the
mechanics of how a world falls into ruin. It has a harder time
understanding the souls still stuck on it.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-reviews/extrapolations-review-meryl-streep-kit-harington-1235351106/
/[ safe savings don't worry ]/
*Silicon Valley Bank marketed itself as a climate tech-friendly bank.
How will its collapse impact the industry?*
Insiders are worried about a possible "chilling effect" on investments.
By Kelly Livingston
March 14, 2023
Silicon Valley Bank's failure on Friday raises concerns over the
potential impacts on the climate technology industry, where SVB was
heavily involved.
"They went out of their way to attract entrepreneurs, to attract
companies in the technology industry. They were one of the first banks
to have a dedicated, clean energy sustainable finance department," Mona
Dajani, Global Head of Energy & Infrastructure at the law firm Shearman
and Sterling, told ABC News. "They consciously developed this practice,
and they were a well-known source — that's where you could go because
they were willing to lend to higher-risk, new companies."
Silicon Valley Bank provided financing for over 1,550 clients working on
climate technology and sustainability, according to its website. As of
December 2021, SVB had committed $3.2 billion to such projects. The bank
also claimed to have led or participated in 62% of community solar
financings, as of last March...
- -
In January 2022, the bank announced a commitment to provide "at least $5
billion by 2027" in financing for sustainability efforts.
With SVB's failure, that commitment, and a potential funding stream for
climate tech projects is now void.
"The ones that are going to be hurt the most are the unsecured kind of
start-ups," Dajani said. "But I do feel that it will make the clean
energy space as a whole come out stronger because they've learned from
this and they're trying to strengthen their foundation to avoid another
collapse and look at other options for funding, for capital."
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/silicon-valley-bank-marketed-climate-tech-friendly-bank/story?id=97850409
/[ Activism -- small way to act now
https://www.votervoice.net/VAOrganizing/campaigns/102183/respond ]/
*Safeguard our Health: Tell the EPA to set Strong Standards for Soot*
On January 27th, 2023, the EPA issued an updated soot standard,
proposing to strengthen the national ambient air quality standard
(NAAQS) for fine particle pollution, also known as particulate matter or
PM2.5. However, this standard does not go nearly far enough, leaving
communities exposed to this dangerous pollutant. A comment period,
open*until March 28th*, gives the public an opportunity to express the
need for more stringent soot standards. As a health professional, your
voice is essential to enacting strong standards.
Soot consists of particulate matter produced as a result of industrial
manufacturing, car exhaust, and emissions from power plants and often
composed of organic chemicals, acidic substances, and heavy metals.
These particles enter the bloodstream through the lungs, and can cause a
host of dangerous health issues, including asthma, Parkinson’s disease,
dementia, low birth weight, and heart disease, among others. It also
increases the risk of preterm birth and infant mortality. With more
stringent standards, the EPA could save 20,000 lives every year.
*There is no such thing as a “safe” level of soot – the more stringent
our soot standards, the healthier we are.*
This is an issue of health inequity. Marginalized populations and
communities of color are more likely to be exposed to soot pollution
from nearly every major source, including power plants, vehicles, and
industrial manufacturing. Discriminatory policies have forced
communities of color into areas of industrial manufacturing, who are
therefore living with increased exposure to particulate matter. The
current EPA standard leaves vulnerable communities behind, and without
imposing the strictest limits, communities of color will not see the
essential reduction in mortality rates.
*
**Tell the EPA to act quickly, and to set the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS) for particulate matter no higher than 8
micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) for the annual standard and no higher
than 25 µg/m3 for the 24-hour standard to best protect the health of our
patients and our communities.**
*https://www.votervoice.net/VAOrganizing/campaigns/102183/respond
/[ Talking about paleo-catastrophe at the University of Washington. ]/
*Peter Ward on CO2, Extinction Events, and a Stagnant Ocean**
*Nate Hagens
Mar 14, 2023 #thegreatsimplification #natehagens #Oceans
Excerpted from The Great Simplification Episode #8 aired on February
23rd, 2022
Full Episode:
• Peter Ward: Peter Ward: “Oceans - What’s the Worst that Can Happen?”
| The Great Simplification #08 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eM1aakTzMw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OS4FIoOKKfc
/[ see a movie may not fix things, it may be a gentle way to look at the
problem ]/
*Extrapolations Review: Packed, Powerful and Deep, Apple TV+’s Limited
Series Cranks Up the Creative Heat*
BY GREG ARCHER
PUBLISHED March 16, 2023
To be sure, it is challenging to create an eight-episode limited series
on a subject that’s bound to trigger people. Here’s to sobering truths.
We’re talking about the decay of the environment in Extrapolations and
what’s at stake for humanity. Does the new Apple TV+ environmental drama
hit all the right marks? Mostly. And the ones it does hit illuminate an
issue with great mindfulness and depth that it’s hard not to walk away
from it moved, even shaken. Roots, the award-winning miniseries from the
1970s, successfully brought the nation to its knees and its ripple
effects—an impactful soul-search—was never really forgotten. We haven’t
often experienced something that struck such a vibrant inner chord like
that on our screens since. Extrapolations tries to and often does, and
one can forgive some of its misfires because of it.
Extrapolations is executive produced by Scott Z. Burns (Contagion, An
Inconvenient Truth), Michael Ellenberg, Gregory Jacobs, Dorothy
Fortenberry, and Lindsey Springer. The star-studded cast includes Meryl
Streep (Only Murders in the Building), Sienna Miller, Daveed Diggs,
Edward Norton, Diane Lane, Tahar Rahim, Yara Shahidi, Matthew Rhys, Keri
Russell, Marion Cotillard, Forest Whitaker, and Game of Thrones’ Kit
Harington. That’s just a sampling of the huge cast.
The series, which was extensively researched, spans 33 years (2037 to
2070) and delves into big-picture issues of climate change through a
vibrant lens of humanity’s shared experience. It reveals what’s
possible, maybe even probable, unless human beings change course
environmentally. Every episode dips into another part of the planet and
the consequences of our actions and our inactions. All this to convey
what’s at stake globally.
Extrapolations takes viewers from London to Mumbai, and Miami to the
Arctic Circle, and then some. Through an array of different characters,
this is a kind of good vs. evil tale. Can the good folks triumph over
the bad folks? All the characters struggle with the challenges brought
on by climate change—from their intimate relationships to their health.
There are some standout performances to note. Nearly all the actors
shine in their roles, however, I’m not sure what happened in creative
translation with Matthew Rhys’ character in the first episode. Dubbed
“Junior,” Rhys plays a pretentious and narcissistic real estate
developer who sees a money-making opportunity in the Arctic. The region,
now devoid of ice, gives Junior hope to bloat his fortune by exploiting
the mineral wealth that’s now been exposed. That’s fine. We get it. A
rich dude who wants more wealth, however, Rhys’ plays the beast way over
the top. Perhaps that’s the point. Still, it doesn’t land well, and
comes across as cartoonish. How it all unfolds, however, feels right.
Savor that...
Meanwhile, to reveal too many details about all the plot points and
characters would spoil the overall experience. That said, viewers most
likely will be moved by Sienna Miller and Meryl Streep. Ah, Meryl.
There’s always Meryl. Ms. Streep, while not given much screen time here,
figures in prominently to the story, especially in the early episodes
where we find her playing the mother of researcher Rebecca
Shearer—Miller at her finest.
There’s something about Streep’s voice, her calming presence, and, well,
her Streepness, that viewers are drawn to. In this case, it figures into
the work Rebecca does as a biologist and the decisions she must make to
ensure her young son’s safety. This is an episode two highlight, when
the setting is 2046, and things have drastically gone south on the planet.
Tahar Rahim, who told MovieWeb, he found creator Scott Z Burns’ to be
“imaginative” yet “concerned” for the environment, plays two roles in
the limited series. We first find him as Omar, whose work is vital in an
international climate conference in Tel Aviv, where a crucial
temperature target will be set. But Omar’s wife, Rebecca, faces a
tragedy. Will he stay or go and be by her side? Look for Rahim in a
pivotal episode six, too. In it, the actor shows immense depth in his
portrayal of a tormented man pushed to the brink.
Take note of Indira Varma (playing Gita Mishra), Edward Norton (Jonathan
Chopin), Cherry Jones (President Elizabeth Burdick), Diane Lane (Martha
Russell), and Michael Gandolfini (Rowan Chopin) in the noteworthy fourth
episode. Varma—she of Obi-Wan Kenobi and Game of Thrones fame—delivers
some of the greatest work I’ve seen from the actress, and it pivots the
limited series, showing the lengths one person with power and money
would do to fight for what they believe in. No matter the cost...
https://movieweb.com/extrapolations-review/
/[ Oh, no...Texas is rising up to change reality, should be satire but
is not ]/
*Texas officials target climate science in textbooks
*By Scott Waldman | 03/16/2023
The Texas State Board of Education altered its internal guidance to
schools last month to emphasize the “positive” aspects of fossil fuels
in science textbooks.
The changes are raising concerns among scientists, education experts and
other board members that the panel is establishing policies that could
lead to the statewide purchase of textbooks that undermine basic tenets
of climate change for years to come.
The Republican-dominated board adopted a series of changes to its
operating rules last month that could influence school decisions on book
purchases. The board member who proposed the changes, Patricia Hardy,
has rejected mainstream climate science and argued that current
teachings about global warming are too “negative.”
“If they’re going to tout how wonderful the alternative climate change
stuff is, then they need to also say all the things that are not good
about it and not just hit on the fossil fuel industry,” Hardy said in an
interview Wednesday. “Our schools are paid for by the fossil fuel
industry for the most part, so there’s a little bit of disingenuousness.”
The new guidelines also portray the Earth’s warming temperatures as the
result of natural fluctuations — flying in the face of the consensus
among climate researchers that humans are causing it by burning fossil
fuels.
The impact of the board’s decision could ripple across the U.S. because
the state is one of the nation’s largest markets for textbooks and
publishers pay close attention to Texas standards, according to Texas
State Board of Education member Rebecca Bell-Metereau, a Democrat who
opposed the changes.
She said her Republican colleagues on the board are “badly educated”
about climate change.
“They don’t really believe in the geological record; they don’t believe
in science,” Bell-Metereau said.
The state board’s operating rules do not carry legal weight, but they
are an authoritative designation of the state’s educational priorities.
That means they can influence how school districts approach classroom
curriculum and textbook selection, said Carisa Lopez, political director
for the Texas Freedom Network, a left-leaning watchdog group involved in
school issues.
For example, the new operating rules could deter school districts from
using textbooks that teach about climate change in a meaningful way,
Lopez said. School districts that choose to use more rigorous science
lessons could face challenges from parents who point to the operating
rules and argue that teaching climate science is a form of political
indoctrination.
“It certainly deters school districts. You give school districts an
unofficial opinion, they’re going to try to play it safe,” Lopez said.
“School districts don’t want to weigh into politics generally. It
certainly politicizes, deeply, climate change. It politicizes science.”
The State Board of Education did not respond to requests for comment.
Hardy inserted language into the rules indicating that instructional
materials must “present positive aspects of the United States and Texas
and its heritage and abundant natural resources.”
The subtle rule changes don’t explicitly reject the science showing that
humans are warming the Earth in ways that are already wreaking havoc,
but Bell-Metereau said they can steer schools toward buying books that
emphasize baseless climate change theories.
Hardy also inserted language to “recognize the ongoing process of
scientific discovery and change over time in the natural world.” That
echoes a common climate denial talking point that incorrectly asserts
that natural climate cycles are to blame for temperature increases over
the last century, rather than the use of fossil fuels.
Critics of the changes also found reason for concern in language that
says books should “present factual information, avoid bias, and
encourage discussion.”
Hardy said at the board meeting that teaching children about fossil
fuels and naturally occurring climatic changes would avoid bias by
presenting “both sides” of climate science.
“You avoid bias by — if it’s a controversial subject — giving both sides
of it,” she said. “You wouldn’t just be presenting one side.”
Scientists have published peer-reviewed research for decades showing
that people’s use of fossil fuels have rapidly warmed the planet. Global
surface temperatures have risen about 1.1 degrees Celsius since 1900,
more than half of the warming that scientists say is needed to trigger
catastrophic changes. A small number of scientists, many of whom are
connected to energy companies, argue that the scientific community is
exaggerating the risks.
The sheer size of Texas gives it remarkable sway over the national
textbook market because publishers want their books to be approved for
use there. About 10 percent of the nation’s 50 million public school
students live in Texas, according to national statistics. The Texas
school board has worked for years to ensure that conservative ideology
is reflected in textbooks used in Texas, including on evolution and climate.
The move in Texas comes as prominent Republicans such as Florida Gov.
Ron DeSantis are using education to advance conservative culture war
issues by banning curriculum on Black history, LBGTQ and climate change
science.
Members of the Texas State Board of Education include a Shell Oil Co.
lawyer and an oil-field service company CEO who have both been critical
of the way climate science is taught. The 15-member board is composed of
10 Republicans and five Democrats...
The oil and gas industry has long had its thumb on the scale of how
Texas children are taught about climate change and fossil fuels, said
Katie Worth, author of the book “Miseducation: How Climate Change Is
Taught in America,” published by Columbia University.
“There’s a real red, blue divide when it comes to what kids are learning
in classrooms,” Worth said. “If you’re a kid, what you’re likely to
learn about climate change is likely going to depend on who is running
the state legislature and the state board of education in your states.
What’s messy about that is climate change doesn’t stop at the border.”
The changes threaten to influence a generation of children who could be
“profoundly miseducated about a severe risk,” said Andrew Dessler, a
climate scientist at Texas A&M University.
“It seems to me that they have reached the conclusion that a
well-educated populace is in opposition to their goals and they’re doing
whatever they can to degrade the educational system so they can push
their policies through,” he said, referring to members of the state
education board.
A 2020 analysis from the National Center for Science Education, a
nonprofit that advocates for education on climate change and evolution,
gave Texas an F when grading its climate science standards because the
state didn’t require the teaching of basic climate science in classrooms.
Texas later changed its policies to allow basic climate science to be
taught.
The rules that the State Board of Education adopted last month could
reverse those moves by allowing the board to disapprove of textbooks
that teach climate science accurately, said Glenn Branch, deputy
director of the National Center for Science Education.
“Texas is an outlier and it’s because the State Board of Education has a
long history of using the state’s clout when it comes to textbook
purchase to lean on publishers to try to compromise scientific accuracy
in the favor of some ideology, whether that’s going to creationism in
regard to evolution or climate change,” he said.
The rules are already guiding outside reviewers examining Texas’
textbooks, Hardy said in the interview. Books that fall outside the new
guidelines will receive lower scores and will likely not be used in the
classroom, she said. Because Texas buys so much instructional material,
she hopes that the changes have a national influence.
Hardy told E&E News that she worked on the changes with the Texas Energy
Council, a coalition of oil and gas companies, as well as newly elected
board member Aaron Kinsey, CEO of American Patrols, an aviation
oil-field services company.
The goal of the group was to eliminate “textbooks written by people not
from Texas who have a negative view of fossil fuels and a positive view
of electric cars.”
“The climate people, the ones who’ve made climate change their religion,
if you don’t believe what they do, they don’t want you to be heard,” she
said. “There are any number of excellent writings that would back up my
position on the climate, and we need to look at both sides of the issue.”
Another member of the Texas State Board of Education, Will Hickman, who
works as an in-house attorney for Shell, previously blocked the
implementation of proposed science standards that would teach students
about the benefits of cutting carbon dioxide.
The board’s priorities are in line with the state Republican Party
platform, which calls for climate change and evolution to be taught as
“theories.”
“We support objective teaching of scientific theories, such as life
origins and climate change,” the platform reads. “These shall be taught
as challengeable scientific theories subject to change as new data is
produced.”
Bell-Metereau, the board member who opposed last month’s changes, said
her colleagues on the board have invited oil and gas officials and
energy groups to testify about climate science, sometimes for hours,
while scientists and citizens are often given two minutes to speak.
“The operating rules are important because it gives more of a legal
avenue for parents to object and that’s really where a lot of it is
coming from,” Bell-Metereau said. “It’s a very organized minority of
people who have extreme views, and they’re learning how to lobby the
board members and the legislators with a very strict line on every
possible subject in science, in history.”
She added that this small group of vocal people who reject climate
science is influencing the educational opportunities of millions of
children. And their ideas are spreading to other states.
“These states are models for other states, and they are coordinating
their efforts,” said Bell-Metereau.
https://www.eenews.net/articles/texas-officials-target-climate-science-in-textbooks/
/[The news archive - looking back]/
/*March 17, 2014*/
March 17, 2014: The New York Times reports:
"Across the parched American West, the long drought has set off a series
of fierce legal and political battles over who controls an increasingly
dear treasure — water."
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/17/us/wests-drought-and-growth-intensify-conflict-over-water-rights.html
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