Global warming…? It’s freezing!


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nam_sfc_4panelOver the past several years, right-wing news talkers have made a winter ritual out of ridiculing global warming whenever there’s a big snow event in the mid-Atlantic or a major cold wave that reaches the South.

“Global warming…? It’s freezing!” they spew.

Except this kind of winter weather is, in fact, a result of global warming. What’s worse is that it’s going to be like this for a long, long time.

Global Warming, Climate Change and Weather

The best way to make yourself look like an ignoramus on this topic is to equate surface air temperatures with global warming. If it’s hot in the summer, it’s not necessarily global warming that’s making it hot. Summer is hot, right?

You have to ask, “Why is it hot? Is it that much hotter?” It may be that global warming is making it hotter than ever, or it could just be a hot summer.

Air gets hot; air get cold. Water, on the other hand, gets less hot and less cold. Water is a far more stable repository of heat than air. That’s why it’s cooler at the shore in the summer when it’s hot in the city. And warmer at the shore in the winter when it’s cold inland. Water temperature resists the day-to-day vagaries of air temperature.

And, mostly, air moves around a lot. Water moves, but much more slowly than the air, so it’s more stable in that regard as well. Unless it’s moving as vapor in the air.

Climate is the basic conditions—the raw materials of air, water vapor, land masses and, of course, that big old sun. Weather is what happens when these conditions interact on a day-to-day basis.

Evaporating oceans that become water vapor, ride in air over a land mass and then fall in the form of rain or snow is what makes life on this planet possible. If this were to stop, we would all die. Fast. But it needs to happen within a certain range and within a certain seasonal pattern for the ecosystem to work is such a way that our lives are possible.

Global warming has deposited exceptional amounts of heat in the oceans, making them more evaporative. This increased amount of available water vapor has changed the climate in ways that we are still trying to understand. What we know for sure is that the exceptional weather results we see these days are unlike anything in our recorded history, and in some cases they are unlike anything at any time that science has been able to study through fossils or ice core samples.

North America’s January Started in Siberia…in October

aer-image

Dr. Judah Cohen is no hippie. He works for one of the world’s leading private weather prediction services. He gets paid quite handsomely to help companies anticipate weather months in advance and put risk mitigation strategies in place.

As I’ve written here repeatedly, major insurers are the leading climate alarmists. Exceptional weather events destroy property, and they’re the ones who have to pay.

Over the past 15 or so years, the northeast US has seen a substantial increase in major winter snow events—costly to cities and states—that did not correlate with an exceptional Labrador counter-current, a coastal down flow of Arctic waters generally associated with a snowy northeast winter. And the storms would sometimes track far south of the traditional path.

Dr. Cohen searched the climate data from around the globe and found something that correlated well: October snow in Siberia. Like the new winter weather in the northeast, these Siberian snows were also new. Typically, these areas of western Siberia remained barren rock through the autumn and into the winter. Suddenly, these remote areas began receiving significant amounts of snow in the month of October.

This change in Siberia in October affects our weather in January and February. Or so Dr. Cohen’s team—and all the companies that pay them so much money—believe.

When this area in Siberia gets covered in a smooth sheet of white snow, it radiates substantially more solar heat than the darker, rumbled rock formations did. This mass of rising warmer air becomes so powerful that it pushes the giant dome of frigid air that covers the polar region in the winter down over North America.

Interlude: Polar Ice

220px-Arctic_Sea_Ice_Minimum_Comparison

Before addressing the madness that is the polar vortex, we should ask the question, “Why is it now snowing in Siberia in October?”

The answer is simple: because it can.

Rain or snow requires the right combination of temperature gradient (hot and cold temperatures near each other) and available moisture (water vapor). The North Pole is cold pretty much all the time; Siberia gets warm in the summer. So the temperature gradient has always been there.

What’s new is the available moisture, in the form of increasingly greater summer melt of the northern polar ice cap. The illustration (click for bigger view and attribution) compares the peak melt in mid-September of 1984 and 2012. Clearly, substantial amounts of new, open water can feed the prevailing westerly winds (moving roughly top to lower left) with moisture that then falls as snow in Siberia (left and lower left). That’s basic meteorology: more or warmer water means more precipitation.

Polar Vortex, Go Home. You’re Cold

The Siberian snowpack creates rising air that reaches the polar air mass and pushes it off its natural polar resting place so it more-or-less spills itself over North America.

The polar vortex is a weak, low pressure system that rotates counterclockwise. This 72-hour forecast loop shows the effect clearly. [NOTE: Link will open in a separate tab. Also, this link is time dependent, so if you’re not looking at this on or about January 25, 2014, it may not show what’s described.] As it spins, it polar air plunges down the western flank well into the South. For the first time ever, people in Louisiana are seeing their pipes burst because the construction of their houses does not account for this kind of weather.

Perversely, when the polar vortex descends over North America, it can sometimes be colder at the bottom of Hudson Bay than it is on the North Pole. Note how warmer air presses up over the northeast side of the system in the forecast loop.

nam_winchl_39h

One thing the polar vortex can’t do is be stronger than the ocean. So it gets stuck in the triangle created by Siberia that is pushing it away and the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic. The illustration at right shows the 39 hour wind chill forecast: 15Z SUN 26 JAN 14 (about 10am local time on Sunday, January 26).

Looks like about -10 F in Little Rhody. So, yeah, polar vortex. Cold, horrible and anomalous. Also, not going anywhere.

Have a great Sunday!

Economic Intersections report, meet coastal resilience necessity


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gear-grabOn first reading, I give Economic Intersections, the Make it Happen Rhode Island report from the RI Foundation and Commerce RI a B.

It’s mostly things we’ve heard before like tech transfer, support for manufacturing and regulatory reform. It has some very good, new areas of focus, and it has an interesting idea that doesn’t quite make the grade. But I’m writing this short piece because there is one, glaring, horrifying and totally irresponsible part that defies any kind of logic whatsoever, at least as it is presented in this executive summary.

Good

The best part of this is the new focus on food production. There is a clear understanding that this burgeoning sector represents an important part of our next economy, and the report recognizes many important factors in building out the industry. Farms and farmland now have much better visibility within the state’s economic apparatus.

Even better, there is a section focused on the “food-health nexus.” Simply having those two words together in a state-level economics report represents a giant step forward. Medical technologies, neuroscience and bioscience all still hold their places at the top of the economy the report envisions, but actual health and what makes it possible—good, fresh food—is in the mix. Yay!

Not So Good

The report devotes a section to making Rhode Island “stronger and more resilient.” In this area, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of expertise at the table, as evidenced by the goal of creating “scalable approaches to economic development through resiliency.”

Resilience doesn’t scale. Lack-of-scale is the essence of resilience. As I’ve written here many times, resilience is based on redundancy, which is inherently inefficient and therefore not scalable. Many small things within redundant networks so that when some of them experience catastrophic failures—as will certainly happen with greater frequency—the system continues to function through alternate paths. The only thing that scales is the network.

The intention is to spawn companies that develop approaches and technologies around community resilience, as if resiliency were a product. I think what they really mean is “protection from catastrophe,” which is different from resilience. And, certainly, there’s a market to be made in protection from catastrophe, because there will be no shortage of global warming-driven catastrophes.

Some might hold out hope that once the economic apparatus starts to examine resilience and systems-oriented approaches to the impacts of climate change, they may actually/accidentally start to pursue genuine resilience.

But don’t hold your breath. Here’s why.

Blind, Stupid, Irresponsible

I like the top-line idea here: promote access to water and marine-based businesses. When you’re the Ocean State, it’s kind of a no-brainer. But this section of the report has a glaring blind spot, a miss so incredibly stupid that it might be more irresponsible than the 38 Studios deal.

Nowhere in this section—even in this section of the full report—does one find the terms “climate change,” “global warming” or “rising sea levels.” It’s true that they throw a bone to the Coastal Resource Management Council’s current role in this area, but CRMC is conspicuously absent from the list of public entities in the plan moving forward.

The plan is heavy on access to the water and marketing. Which means, of course, building right at the water’s edge. Think “marina access to a mini-resort”.

This represents an irresponsibly short-sighted approach. Coastal properties already have almost no choice but the federal insurance pool, and these costs will certainly only go higher. It is only a matter of time before any coastal infrastructure gets destroyed.

To add insult to injury, the full report refers to New York City’s 2011 Comprehensive Waterfront Plan, and the last of its eight goals is “Increase Climate Resilience.” I mean…right?

This is the kind of pull-your-hair-out stupid that still permeates our econo-think. It’s possible that they never put two and two together to make four. Or it’s possible that “certain powers” deliberately excluded the TOTALLY FRICKIN’ OBVIOUS, SIMPLE LIKE FALLING DOWN CONNECTION HERE!

(As background, Gov. Carcieri’s administration actively worked to suppress any mention of solar power in the RIEDC’s 2009/2010 Green Economy Roadmap authored by yours truly. So this kind of move is nothing new.)

CONNECT. THE. DOTS!

I know this is complicated, so I’ll go step by step.

1. The report is called Economic Intersections, so it’s about connecting things that might be complementary.

2. One idea in the report is to develop marine-based businesses, following New York’s waterfront plan.

3. New York’s waterfront plan includes increasing the waterfront’s resilience.

4. Another idea in the report is to develop resilience.

It seems so elementary, so obvious that I’m embarrassed to have to spell it out like this, but…here goes:

Focus your resiliency efforts on the coastal impacts of global warming-driven sea level rise and catastrophic weather events so that your marine-based businesses can be, oh, I don’t know…resilient.

Sheldon: climate change has hurt RI commerical fishing


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sheldonAddressing climate change is a financial risk for the coal and oil industries, it’s true. But Senator Sheldon Whitehouse pointed out in a congressional committee today that not addressing climate change has already adversely affected jobs right here in Rhode Island.

“I’m prepared to accept that there are going to be economic impacts on families that you are here to represent,” Whitehouse said in the Environmental and Public Works Committee today. “And it’s important that in our solution we address that concern, because that’s a legitimate concern. What I can’t accept is that the coal and oil jobs are the only jobs that are at stake in this discussion … not when fishermen in Rhode Island are no longer catching winter flounder because Narragansett Bay is three or four degrees warmer in the winter.”

He went on to point out other economic impacts climate change is having on the Ocean State’s economy:

“We are losing our state at the coastal verge,” he said, “The houses at Roy Carpenter’s beach are falling into the ocean I am not going to ignore those factors out of a desire to protect coal and oil jobs. I will work with you to a solution that solves our mutual concerns and helps those industries but I am not going to ignore those problems.”

You can watch the full five minute video here:

Happy 50th speech, Sheldon Whitehouse


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time to wke up sheldon 50Sheldon Whitehouse has now told America 50 times that it’s “time to wake up.”

Every week our Senator speaks on the Senate floor about why America needs to start addressing the causes of and solutions to climate change. Wednesday was his 50th such address. No one dresses down the false equivalency of the climate change “debate” better than Sheldon:

“At the Newport tide gauge sea level is up almost ten inches since the 1930’s … you measure that. It takes basically a ruler,” he said. “We’re about three to four degrees warmer in the winter in Narragansett Bay. You measure that. It takes a thermometer. It’s one thing to be against science, it’s another thing to be the party against measurement.”

Sheldon takes aim at Wall St. Journal editorial page


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sheldonFor 49 weeks, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse has spoken on the Senate floor about climate change. Last week he spoke about “manufactured doubt” and “the role of the media in all of this,” he said.

“We count in America on the press to report faithfully and accurately our changing world and to awaken the public to apparent mounting threats.”

“But what happens when the press fails in this role? What happens when the press stops being independent, when it becomes the bedfellow of special interests? …Who will watch the watchmen themselves becomes then the question? The press are supposed to scrutinize all of us, who watches them when they fail at their independent role?”

Speaking of a “very specific example,” Sheldon takes aim at the Wall Street Journal editorial page and lays out what he calls the climate “deniers playbook.” He says the editorial page misinforms readers about “harmful industrial pollutants … all to help the industry to help the campaign to manufacture doubt and delay action.”

“The pattern is a simple one: deny the science, question the motives, exaggerate the costs. Call it the polluting industry 1,2,3.”

Worth watching:

Climate change movie at URI an unqualified success


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Fossil fuel divestment is coming to URI

At 7 pm on Monday, October 14th, Fossil Free Rhode Island (FFRI) kicked off its campaign to push the University of Rhode Island to divest from fossil fuels with a screening of Do the Math, the ground-breaking new documentary from 350.org about the climate movement, to a packed house in Weaver Auditorium on the Kingston campus. “We stood … and we sat in the aisles to see Do the Math and to celebrate that fossil fuel divestment will come to URI,” I exclaimed enthusiastically even as I do physics at URI.

Fossil fuel divestment is coming to URI
Fossil fuel divestment is coming to URI

Tommy Viscione from Rotaract hosted, introducing Bianca Piexoto, President of Student Action for Sustainability (SAS), Evan Connolly, Vice President of Environmental and Natural Resource Economics Student Association (ENRESA) and Lisa Petrie, Chair of the Green Task Force of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of South County presented information on their groups.

Senator Whitehouse, who was unable to attend due to the government shutdown, sent a personal message of support to the group.

“Thank you to the Sierra Club and to all the students participating in this event for taking action on climate change. Every week, I give a speech in the Senate urging my colleagues to wake up to the effects of climate change. The effects are all around us, and they’re only getting worse: sea-level rise, ocean warming and acidification, temperature records and heat waves.

Mother Nature is giving us some pretty strong signals, and we ignore them at our peril. I’ll keep fighting to get Congress to wake up, and your actions on campus are also critical. We need to spread awareness and encourage everyone to make their voices heard. Again, thank you for organizing this event, for pressing for divestment, and for joining the fight against climate change. I hope you enjoy the film.”

The audience sat in rapt silence as the film laid out the “terrifying math” of global warming: the fact that, barring drastic action, we will blow through our “carbon budget–” the amount of fossil fuels we can burn without utterly destroying the climate–within the next 15 years–and, still more frightening, that the fossil fuel companies already have on their books over five times that amount.

Beyond “the Math” it documented the emergence of the burgeoning climate movement in the U.S., from the protests against the proposed Keystone XL pipeline to the divestment campaigns that have sprung up on over 300 college campuses and in scores of cities nationwide. A pre-recorded video message from Bill McKibben, The Next Chapter, was shown after after the movie.

Since we launched the Do The Math tour sixteen American cities including Providence … seven or eight big universities, some of our big denominations like United Church of Christ. (They have plans to divest.) There’s a lot of momentum so we need you in this fight pushing ahead…We continue to fight Keystone in every way we can. There are 75,000 people who have pledged civil disobedience — we hope that it doesn’t come to that, but if it does, you know where I will be … Very glad to see lots of people out for Summer Heat to shut down Brayton Point, the last coal fired station around here. Time to to shut it down.” In fact, last week, the new owners announced plans to retire the plant.

“The movie made me feel hopeful about the possibility of ending the use of fossil fuels and saving the earth and all its inhabitants!” said Jan Creamer of Wakefield.

Then Sarah Martin, ENRESA President, introduced the panel: Abel Collins, RI Sierra Club, Rachel Bishop, Brown Divest Coal, Nick Katkevich, founding member FFRI and Pat Prendergast, a second year environmental and natural resource economics master’s student and a URI Energy Fellow.

A lively discussion followed and the panel adeptly handled a wide range of questions beginning with what Larry Kelland of Wakefield described as a creeping expansion of corporate “rights” cementing the influence of fossil fuel companies influence on public policy due to the Citizens United Supreme Court decision. Other topics that came up were: widening the divestment strategy and asking if the group was looking into asking philanthropic foundations to divest so as to be consistent with their charter to “do public good.” Liz Marsis, formerly of the George Wiley Center, pointed out that diverse environmental groups must band together with social justice groups in demanding change. Nick Katkevich echoed this sentiment, noting that

we need to move outside our silos and see the connections between the crises we face. Climate change will unleash a wave of migration such as the world has never seen, making immigration reform more urgent than ever. The same banks that are financing mountaintop removal mining are forcing families out of their homes.

Judging from the conversations before hand, perhaps as much as one third of the crowd came to get information. There seemed to be groups in which one person was very well informed while others came to learn. Judging from the response and questions, the audience left convinced that there was no doubt that the evidence was compelling and immediate action was needed. Terry Cummings, a member of Occupy Providence and URI alumn said “(it was a) great success. I dig the film (second viewing) yet, it’s the peeps and their awakening that moves me as well.”

Maureen Logan of Westerly, who is also a member of the Raging Grannies, asked about hosting a screening of the documentary there. Terry Cummings, a member of Occupy Providence and URI alumnus, said “(it was a) great success. I dig the film (second viewing) yet, it’s the peeps and their awakening that moves me as well.”

Tommy Viscione, wrapped things up with announcements of upcoming events and actions. Later that night Abel Collins posted his thoughts that summed up the feeling of the event:

I am going to bed tonight with a deep sense of gratitude. Thanks to the great work of URI student volunteers and the member/volunteers of Fossil Free RI, , and the Rhode Island Sierra Club, we had standing room only in the auditorium.

The film was inspiring, but it was the community that came together to experience it and the great discussion that we had afterward that made it meaningful.

Bill McKibben debated divestment at Brown U. last week


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mckibbenIn case you missed it, the nation’s leading climate activist Bill McKibben was at Brown University last week to debate divesting from oil and coal companies that contribute to environmental degradation and man-made climate change. He was challenged by a former CEO of one of the coal companies Brown is considering divesting from.

“The conversation was fascinating, but this conversation isn’t new to campus,” said student Rachel Bishop in an email. “Brown Divest Coal has engaged in discussions with the administration and students for a year now. In fact, Brown has an entire committee charged with considering the ethics of Brown’s investments, and they endorsed Brown’s divestment back in April. I hope the Board of Trustees listens to the message coming out of these conversations and vote yes to divestment.”

Here’s the entire video of the debate:

Sheldon’s 9 reasons to care about climate change


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Just in case you needed any further evidence that climate change is real and that Sheldon Whitehouse is one of  hippest people on The Hill, Rhode Island’s junior senator authors a listicle on Buzzfeed called, “9 Reasons I Care About Climate Change – And You Should Too.”

Complete with animated gif’s like this one that show what the Capital City will look like when the sea level rises:

pvdsealevel

Environmentalists must wait for another chance at Biden


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Biden meme

Note:  the rally on Thursday is called off. President Biden is tending to his son Beau, and will not make it to RI. Send your thoughts his way.

In the middle of August it can be hard to recall February, but it wasn’t all that long ago that busloads of Rhode Islanders headed down to be part of the historic “Forward On Climate” rally that drew between 35-50,000 people to Washington, DC to demand President Obama stop Transcanada’s Keystone XL Pipeline. Since that joyous frigid day, environmental activists have relentlessly dogged the steps of the President and Vice President wherever they have traveled, conducting rallies to drive home the point, Say No To The Pipeline!

For its part, the Administration continues to play the decision on the project close to its vest. President Obama said in his June Climate speech that he would only approve Keystone “if this project doesn’t significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution.” Obama clearly wants to leave a strong environmental legacy and his credibility hinges on this decision. Meanwhile, Biden told a Sierra Club volunteer that he agreed with those who oppose the pipeline. These are encouraging signs, especially because a very strong case will be made that the Keystone XL would lead to massive increases in carbon pollution.

On the other hand, Obama already approved the southern leg of the pipeline. More importantly, there is a lot of money on the other side of  the issue, including that of the profiteering Koch brothers whose Texas refineries would be processing the toxic tar sands oil coming out of Canada to sell on the global oil market.

It is unclear which side is winning. Millions of people have spoken out against the pipeline, but they might all be drowned out by the billions of the fossil fuel industry. President Obama has postponed the decision on the pipeline multiple times, and it looks like it may well get pushed into 2014. Our best hope is in keeping the pressure on. While unfortunately we will not be able to give Vice President Biden the #noKXL message in person as we had planned for, you can still take action here: http://www.sierraclub.org/dirtyfuels/tar-sands/virtual-chain/.

Climate activists protest Brayton Point power plant


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hljkhjh Hundreds of climate activists, (including members of Keepers of the Mountains, Fossil Free RI, and 350.org), marched on the Brayton Point Coal Plant yesterday; I counted myself lucky to be among them. The action began with Saturday’s 6 hour long training, and resulted in 44 arrests on Sunday afternoon- (and more than a few sunburned faces).

Louis Alstadt, (former Vice President of ExxonMobil), recently told the world: “It will take masses of people demanding action from politicians to offset the huge amount of money that the fossil fuel industry is using to influence lawmakers.”  This statement reflects our reasons for taking to the streets, demonstrating passion and perseverance, in such great numbers.  The shared beliefs which brought us together were summarized by one of the rally’s first speakers: “Their vision of profit by coal or petrol is wrong.”  The industry has abused Appalachian workers, leveled mountains, and impacted our environment from West Virginia to Massachusetts, and remains the largest single source of global warming pollution in the world.

brayton point“We believe that climate change is an absolutely urgent and pressing threat that will kill people,” said Craig Altemose, director of the Better Future Project.  Yet he also noted that this isn’t really just “climate change” – it is, more specifically, “global warming.”   We must call it what it is.  He described Russia’s heat wave in 2010, which claimed the lives of 15,000, and discussed the global impact of that season.  With coal comprising one-third of all CO2 emissions, we have no choice but to end our consumption within the next 30-40 years.  To ignore this fact (or to buy the myth of ‘carbon-free coal’) is what one speaker jokingly called “wicked stupid.”

ResizedImage_1375045185756Dominion Energy, the owner of Brayton Point, has invested $1 billion to make the plant more “environmentally friendly.”  This is laughable when it contributes to higher rates of asthma and cancer, and tops the EPA’s list of “most toxic emissions” in Massachusetts.

And what did we face, as peaceful protestors looking to gain Gov. Deval Patrick’s attention?

One hundred law enforcement officials from the Somerset Police Department, Massachusetts State Police, the Massachusetts Environmental Police, the Southeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, and members of the Bristol County sheriff’s office. Those arrested were taken to a makeshift jail set up by the sheriff’s office at a National Guard armory in Fall River.  However, our criminal (in)justice system is not enough to stop many folks who see this as an urgent life-or-death matter.

ResizedImage_13750451849348According to the FB page of 350 Massachusetts, Turner Bledsoe (79 years old) had this to say, regarding his arrest: “This is the most important thing we can do at this time. We’re on the tipping point. Emissions must go down. If we don’t do something about it, we’re in the soup.”

One protestor I spoke with said she appreciated everyone shouting “Thank you, We love you!” at the arrestees.  The gratitude and beauty was indeed palpable, and I left with a renewed sense of purpose.  It isn’t that we “should” do more; we must do more.  When lives and ecosystems are at stake, it is an obligation- to the earth and to each other.

Activists: More than 40 arrested at Brayton Point


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Activists say about 40 people were arrested today outside of Brayton Point power plant in near Fall River as a protest against the major Massachusetts polluter’s contributions to climate change drew almost 400 people.

“Arrests took place quickly and peacefully around noon,” said Katrina Chaves. She will post a more detailed report later tonight.

summer heat arrest

Occupy Fall River recorded this really sweet video from 9:30 in the morning.

Live: #SummerHeat Shut Down Brayton Point protest


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Click on the photo for live video.

Environmental activists are gathered outside Brayton Point power plant in a mass protest today. They hope to shut down the major source of electricity in Southern New England to call attention to the role power plant pollution has in climate change and overall environmental degradation.

You can watch it live here:

Live streaming video by UstreamCheck out the Facebook page and here’s a statement from the activists:

We are calling upon Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick to shut down Brayton Point, the largest coal and gas-fired power plant in New England. Brayton Point is bad for our climate: in 2010, it emitted 6 million of tons of carbon dioxide, making it one of the largest sources of greenhouse gases in all of New England. If we are to have any hope of solving the climate crisis, we must move beyond coal and replace it with renewable energy (not gas). Brayton Point is also bad for our health. Each year, the plant spews 15,000 pounds of mercury, arsenic, lead, and other hazardous air pollutants into the air, just down the road from where children play baseball. These pollutants can seriously damage the heart, brain and lungs.

Sheldon, Abel talk climate change at O’ Mist


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The deck at the Ocean Mist just keeps getting closer and closer to the water. (photo by Bob Plain)
The deck at the Ocean Mist just keeps getting closer and closer to the water. (photo by Bob Plain)

No one in Washington DC has been more vocal about the need to address climate change than Senator Sheldon Whitehouse. And here in Rhode Island, no one has been more vocal than Sierra Club director and former congressional candidate Abel Collins.

On Friday, at 2pm, these two leading climate activists will be together at the Ocean Mist in Matunuck – perhaps the most obvious example of how climate change is and will continue to alter coastal Rhode Island. The iconic Ocean State beach that is a mainstay of the Matunuck economy gets closer and closer to the water as climate change exacerbates coastal erosion.

From the Facebook event:

It’s been a hot week. Cool off on Friday and come have a FREE Climate Change Cocktail and Sign the Washington Bound Banner! Speakers include Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Kevin Finnegan O’Mist Owner, and more. For additional information call 401-578-0210

For more on climate change, Whitehouse speaks about it on the Senat floor every single week. Here’s his address from this week:

‘God won’t save us from climate catastrophe’


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally

Best progressive Rhode Island headline of the day comes courtesy of the Huffington Post: “Sheldon Whitehouse: God Won’t Save Us From Climate Catastrophe” Michael McCauliff’s lede was pretty great too.

WASHINGTON — God will not save us, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) declared in a Senate floor speech on climate change Wednesday that sounded more like a sermon than a political appeal.

It’s great not only because because it’s pretty undeniable logic – “If we believe in an all-powerful God, then we must then believe that God gave us this earth, and we must in turn believe that God gave us its laws of gravity, of chemistry, of physics,” he said – but also because it turns the entire debate around:

“Hope for a nanny God, who will with a miracle grant us amnesty from our folly — that’s not aligned with either history or the text of the Bible. How arrogant — how very far from humility — would be the self-satisfied, smug assurance that God, a tidy-up-after-us God will come and clean up our mess?”

You can watch the whole speech below, but make sure you read and/or watch MSNBC’s Chris Hayes tie Sheldon’s speech in with the GOP effort to block Obama’s appointment to head the EPA.

Happy Earth Day, RI from Sheldon Whitehouse


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Happy Earth Day, Rhode Island … to celebrate: enjoy some outside time. Or, if you’re stuck in front of a machine all day, at least enjoy this great piece by our own Senator Sheldon Whitehouse:

I’m working with Rep. Henry Waxman and other colleagues in Congress to draft legislation to put a price on carbon. Big polluters have had a free pass for far too long. Not only will a carbon fee reduce carbon emissions, it will force big polluters to pay for the damage their pollution does to public health and the environment, generating billions in new revenue for the American people.

 

He writes the piece for a new web zine called Medium … I like what it stands for: “Medium is based on the belief that the sharing of ideas and experiences is what moves humanity forward. The Internet is the greatest idea-sharing tool ever imagined, but we’ve only scratched the surface of its capabilities. More concretely, Medium is a system for reading and writing. A place where you can find and share knowledge, ideas, and stories—specifically, ones that need more than 140 characters and are not just for your friends. It’s a place where you can work with others to create something better than you can on your own.”

Click on the image to read Sheldon's full post on Medium.com
Click on the image to read Sheldon’s full post on Medium.com

Rhode Island Can Be Heroic On Climate Change


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“By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail”~ Ben Franklin

Fourth Economy Consulting, a firm out of Pennsylvania hired as part of the federally funded “Sustainable RI” grant, recently submitted its preliminary report of the strengths and weaknesses of Rhode Island’s economy. The first recommendation in the report’s initial guidance section is to “Create One Voice–Set a Clear Course.” This idea is not new. In fact it’s been a common refrain in the state since before I started paying close attention to economic development policy. We need an identity that we can market to the world in order to draw and retain talented people to our workforce.

New York has finance, art, media, and fashion. Boston has education, bio-medical research, and healthcare. Thus these metropolises dominate the playing field of the “knowledge” economy that we are seeking to compete on, and our city-state isn’t even in the same league. How do we separate ourselves?

As much as I hear people talk about it, I don’t hear a lot of ideas about what our special brand is going to be. As an outsider, Fourth Economy wasn’t so bold as to suggest what our singular voice should be, but as one of those home grown young professionals the state is looking to keep, I will.

Here’s my thinking: for as far into the future as we can see, there are two storylines that dominate economic policy. On the one hand is the depletion of the natural resources we use to achieve our luxuriant civilization, and on the other, the related story of global warming. There will doubtless be other stories, but these two are as inevitable as death and taxes.

As a small state with nearly 500 miles of precious coastline and no fossil fuel deposits to speak of, we have a lot at stake in these stories. Sea level rise will affect us disproportionately harshly, and the laws of supply and demand will make any dependence on oil and other dirty fuels foolishly costly.

Fortunately, we can play the hero in both tales by transitioning from our current carbon intensive economy to a carbon neutral one. Our identity, our one-voice clear-course brand, can be the ecology economy.  This pragmatic transition will build a strong economy now and leave us with a resilient Rhode Island for the future of certain upheaval.

Let us emulate Sweden which aims to wean itself entirely from fossil fuels by 2020 or Norway which plans to be carbon neutral by 2030. Massachusetts and Connecticut have passed Climate Solutions Acts that have the goal of 80% reductions in emissions by 2050. We can up the ante. I bet we can reach 100% by 2050. Let’s leave our neighbors in the dust for once.

A list of specific prescriptions to kickstart our economic makeover might begin with:

  • Make the Rhode Climate Change Commission’s report “Adapting to Climate Change in the Ocean State: A Starting Point” required reading for policy makers from Town Hall to the State House. It will serve as a good planning document going forward.
  • Make major new investments in our public transit system (House bill 5073 is a start). Given our size and the distribution of our population, we could have the best bus system in the country. Adding a second hub in South County to create a circulator which doesn’t have to go to Providence would be pleasant and efficient. Also, let’s work with Massachusetts and the federal transportation authorities to let RIPTA  run service into southeastern Mass. Tell your Rep to invest in transit here.
  • Create incentives and opportunities for clean energy. Restoring the Renewable Energy Tax Credit (House Bill 5116, Senate Bill 127-Action Alert here) is a good way to revive the residential solar industry in RI. Currently installment of photovoltaics and solar hot water systems is limited to electricians and plumbers who are in short supply.  Creating a new licensed profession of solar installers would speed renewable development and create jobs. This industry presents opportunities for an apprenticeship program and the growth of local micro-financing.
  • Demand that the Economic Development Corporation embrace the opportunity of small scale agricultural business. We love visiting our local farms and eating our local food. Our tourists like it too. The EDC would do well to promote the “eco” in ecotourism.
  • Make Senator Reed’s Blackstone Valley National Park initiative happen!
  • Expedite the high speed rail, commuter rail, and large scale renewable projects in the works and bring the industry to supply their construction to Quonset.

Even these first steps toward an ecology economy will offer us handsome economic returns and leave us more competitive. Making them happen is more a matter of determination and commitment than large amounts of public money. As we shine more and more brightly in the new economy we will become a better place to live and work; as our name spreads far and wide as a beacon of hope we will attract more of what we want and need.

Luckily, everywhere you turn in Rhode Island you find politicians who are avowed environmentalists.  The Governor and those in the Congressional delegation can sell our new brand nationally and internationally.  We also have a public that grasps the challenges we face and that is eager to cheer these politicians on. With “one voice,” let’s declare that our economic failures are at an end. We will be prepared.

 

“This Op-ed first appeared in the Providence Journal on March 16, 2013. Many thanks to Bob Plain for reposting it here on RIfuture.”

Whitehouse’s Week That Was In Washington DC


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally. (Photo by Jack McDaid.)

It was a busy political week here in the Ocean State, and it was for those who represent us inside the beltway, as well … off-shore drilling, climate change, carbon pollution, the debate on how to control gun violence, the budget process and much more…

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse managed to stay involved in all of it. His communications director, Seth Larson sums up the week that was for in Washington for Sheldon Whitehouse:

On Monday he and Congressman Cicilline announced their plans to re-introduce the Offshoring Prevention Act in the Senate and House, respectively.  The bill would level the playing field for American manufacturers by eliminating a special tax break for companies that ship jobs overseas.  In doing so, it would also raise nearly $20 billion in new revenue.  Here’s coverage from the Pawtucket Times.

On Tuesday, Senator Whitehouse joined Rep. Waxman and others in unveiling a new legislative framework for a carbon fee.  The idea behind such a fee would be to make the big polluting industries responsible for the financial damage caused by carbon pollution.  In doing so, it would create an incentive to reduce pollution, and raise billions of dollars in new revenue, all of which would be returned to the American people in some form.  The Members are soliciting comments on several sections of the legislation.  You can read the Washington Post’s Wonkblog analysis of it here.

On Wednesday, the Senate Budget Committee began debate on its proposed budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2014.  Here is Senator Whitehouse’s opening statement.

On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee finished its consideration of four gun-violence prevention measures.  All four were approved by the Committee, including a bill to ban military-style assault weapons and limit the size of ammunition magazines.  The Providence Journal has the scoop on Senator Whitehouse’s push to secure a vote on a narrower proposal to eliminate high-capacity magazines, in the event that the broader assault weapons ban legislation fails to pass the full Senate.

And last night, the Budget Committee finished debating the budget resolution and voted to approve it.  Senator Whitehouse voted with his Democratic colleagues in favor of the resolution, and released this statement afterward.

Environmental Disobedience


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For those of you trapped in caves, the weather has been getting unruly of late. 2012 was the latest in a long string of very hot years, the hottest on record in fact. It brought with it extreme drought, raging wildfires and Superstorm Sandy. The accumulated damage is still being tabulated but it will be in the hundreds of billions of dollars and countless lost lives. Climate scientists, conservative by nature and cowed by bombastic and well funded deniers, have finally grown so alarmed with the rapid progression of global warming that they are sticking their necks out and attributing the extreme weather to climate change.

Hallelujah! Now armed with overwhelming science and growing public support, it’s time for environmentalists (by which I mean everyone who would like to have a habitable planet) to get unruly, too. That appears to be the rationale behind my employer the Sierra Club’s recent decision to endorse civil disobedience for the first time in its 120 year history. As our national executive director Michael Brune says in his recent “From Walden to the White House” letter:

“For civil disobedience to be justified, something must be so wrong that it compels the strongest defensible protest. Such a protest, if rendered thoughtfully and peacefully, is in fact a profound act of patriotism. For Thoreau, the wrongs were slavery and the invasion of Mexico. For Martin Luther King, Jr., it was the brutal, institutionalized racism of the Jim Crow South. For us, it is the possibility that the United States might surrender any hope of stabilizing our planet’s climate…

We are watching a global crisis unfold before our eyes, and to stand aside and let it happen — even though we know how to stop it — would be unconscionable. As the president said on Monday, “to do so would betray our children and future generations.”  It couldn’t be simpler: Either we leave at least two-thirds of the known fossil fuel reserves in the ground, or we destroy our planet as we know it. That’s our choice, if you can call it that.”

Fight, or resign ourselves to a climate that threatens civilization as we know it: it really isn’t much of a choice is it? Sierra Club and numerous other organizations have been using traditional grassroots and institutional advocacy for decades to fight climate change, and it hasn’t been enough. Others like Bill McKibben’s 35o.org and many individuals have already crossed the line of civil disobedience in the effort to save the planet. It’s about time we all stand as one and make it clear that our halfhearted and incremental progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions is unacceptable.

With that in mind, let’s do it. On February 17th, there is a massive climate action rally planned and you’re invited. This will be the biggest such rally ever held and should draw more than 25,000 people to the White House to tell President Obama among other things that the Keystone XL Pipeline must not be allowed to proceed.

A bus or buses will be going down to D.C., cars full of people too. Can you make it? You can pledge your attendance and find out more information on how to get down there by following this link.

Progress Report: Why Public TV Matters; Public Cars for Legislators; Woonsocket School Committee; Climate Change


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Image courtesy of WeKnowMemes.com

Remember way back in the days when we feared Mitt Romney might become president and, if he did, he would cut public funding to PBS? Well Rhode Island already beat Romney to this nightmare scenario for liberals … WSBE Ch.36 is being transitioned off the state payroll beginning this month, reports Bill Rappleye of WJAR, and the local PBS affiliate now has about two years to become self-sustaining or else…

WSBE’s budget was dramatically cut in the 2012 state budget and both Gov. Chafee and the legislature should strongly consider reinstating the funding next year. Are there perhaps some potential synergies with Capitol TV? It’s easy to see why the mainstream media wouldn’t give much coverage to public broadcasting cuts, and WJAR deserves credit for reporting this story. It’s also easy to see why publicly financed television is important, in light of WPRI’s decision to keep Abel Collins out of its televised debate.

Speaking of WPRI, the other local TV station reports that state legislative leaders sometimes drive state vehicles to private events. It’s a well-reported story and plenty newsworthy but I often find myself wishing that Tim White would use his considerable investigative prowess to shed light on more meaningful issues than publicly-funded company cars and state workers who take long lunch breaks – like this one, for example. My guess is this type of red-meat-for-Republicans reporting is being driven by the same corporate forces and trickle down mentality that kept Collins out of the debate and thought Rhode Island needed a show catering to corporate executives…

And speaking of red meat for conservatives … Woonsocket voted to make school committee members appointed rather than elected officials. Town councilors and municipal officials across the state are no doubt jealous of the control the city just wrested away from the school department.

Look for financially-struggling West Warwick to be the next to consider this huge change in how local public education is managed.

Might Hurricane Sandy be the bellwether that gets Rhode Island to act on climate change? EcoRI runs a great piece that makes the case it should … meanwhile legislative heavyweights Sen Josh Miller and Rep. Chris Blazejewski are teaming up to study the effects of climate change on the Ocean State.

Here are some of the best overreactions to Obama being reelected. Though my favorite wing nut of the week is the Montana legislator who asked for his salary in gold and solver coin.

If you don’t think Republicans’ war on taxes is a part and parcel of class warfare, famed GOP strategist Lee Atwater might agree with you … but, then, he seemed to think it was part and parcel of a race war!

On this day in 1776, a British newspaper reports that former friend to England Ben Franklin has taken up with the revolutionaries in the American colonies…

Progress Report: ‘Marketplace’ Looks at DLT Cutbacks; WPA Plaques Disappear; Bad News for Citizens Bank; Olympics


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Marketplace, the public radio program that makes economics fun and easy to follow, reached out to RI Future yesterday. They are doing a piece – for tonight’s show, I believe – on layoffs at local unemployment offices and wanted to talk with our contributor, Jonathan Jacobs, who has been filing stories for us on losing his job at DLT. Marketplace is on RIPR tonight at 6:30.

A farm on Shermantown Road in North Kingstown. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Staff cuts at the state unemployment office may not matter to most of us, but to many of Rhode Island’s most unlucky residents (the ones who were laid off during the down economy) efficient unemployment insurance payments can make the difference between being foreclosed or not. Here are the stories Jonathan Jacobs has filed for RI Future on the situation.

Also, just in case you missed it, Aaron Regunberg has also been covering the unemployment crisis in Rhode Island. Every week he profiles a local person who is out of work (here’s a list of all his stories on the crisis). The idea is to show that unemployment is more than just a a quarterly percentage sent out by the state to compare our woes with Michigan and Nevada. There are real Rhode Islanders whose lives are being severely scarred by this crisis.

And speaking of unemployment, the Projo reports that WPA plaques are disappearing from sites where the government put people to work building up the commons and our shared infrastructure that we still use to get to the office and other places today … maybe trickle-down Republicans are taking them hoping we won’t remember what got the country out of the last big economic downturn?

Here’s hoping employees of Citizens Bank don’t have to join them on the unemployment line as a result of RBS’ issues. Either way, it’s high time we start talking about relocalizing banks.

All this talk about the economy has taken the focus away from climate change – something humanity can little afford to do, GoLocal’s Rob Horowitz reminds us this morning.

Awesome sentence about the Navy testing unmanned military drones in Narragansett Bay: “The bay known as a playground for the rich is the testing ground for the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, where the Navy is working toward its goal of achieving a squadron of self-driven, undersea vehicles.”

Speaking of completely unnecessary military endeavors … today in 1964, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, “giving President Lyndon B. Johnson nearly unlimited powers to oppose “communist aggression” in Southeast Asia.”

I love the irony in Fox News seeming to care more that US Olympic uniforms look American than they do that they actually be American.


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