This week’s climate shorts
With California officials predicting that by 2040 drought could diminish the state’s water supply by 10%, Governor Gavin Newsom has announced actions and plans to ensure long-term water security for the state’s 8.4 million households.
Over the past two years, the state has invested $8 billion in projects to conserve, store and de-salinize the region’s water in an expensive and innovative battle with climate change.
The administration’s “strategy document” “California’s Water Supply Strategy, Adapting to a Hotter, Drier Future” lays out suggestions such as investing in new water sources, jumpstarting projects, and using emerging technology to address how water is managed in the state.
“The best science tells us that we need to act now to adapt to California’s water future. Climate change means drought won’t just stick around for two years at a time like it historically has – extreme weather is the new normal here in the American West and California will adapt to this new reality,” Governor Newsom said at the Antioch Brackish Desalination Project. “California is launching an aggressive plan to rebuild the way we source, store and deliver water so our kids and grandkids can continue to call California home in this hotter, drier climate.”California’s Water Supply Strategy outlines actions needed now to invest in new sources, transform water management
The best and worst cities for climate change in 2022
Using 2020 U.S. Census Bureau data, we identified the 452 most populated metro statistical areas in the country. We then analyzed data from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and several other studies across six key factors to determine which of those metro areas were the best and worst for climate change.
- heat and humidity
- flooding and sea level rise
- climate related disasters
- air quality
- social vulnerability
- community resilience
The top ten cities were: (with SF being the best)
- San Francisco
- Seattle
- Columbus, Ohio
- Minneapolis
- Baltimore
- Milwaukee
- Portland
- Pittsburgh
- RIchmond, VA
- Denver
WORST CITIES (with houston being the worst)
1. HOUSTON
2-5 FLORIDA: MIAMI, TAMPA, JACKSONVILLE, ORLANDO
6. NEW ORLEANS
7. LOS ANGELES
8. MEMPHIS
9. RIVERSIDE, CA
10: VIRGINIA BEACH
In a poignantly intimate article, Loss and damage: What happens when climate change destroys lives and cultures? the authors reference a glacier in the Peruvian Andes whose disappearance is equated with the departure of the gods.
This is just one example of non-economic loss and damage (NELD) or intangible loss and damage, which refers to losses that cannot be quantified. In UNFCCC jargon, the term Loss and Damage has been used for many years as countries in the Global South seek recompense from the North to help them address the consequences of a climate crisis for which they bear no responsibility.
In the belief of the Quechua people, Mount Ausangate is a powerful god of the landscape and the decline of the glacier that sits atop it is a sign of the “wrath of the deity”. The glacier’s retreat has also put a stop to the centuries-old practice of collecting small blocks of ice during an annual pilgrimage, which are thought to have healing properties when consumed.
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Intangible loss and damage can result from climate-induced harm to:
- Biodiversity and species
- Culture, traditions and heritage
- Ecosystem services or habitat
- Human life
- Human mobility
- Human identity
- Knowledge and ways of knowing
- Mental and emotional wellbeing
- Order in the world
- Physical health
- Productive land
- Self-determination and influence
- Sense of place
- Social fabric
- Sovereignty
- Territory
University of Exeter Professor Neil Adger defines intangible loss and damage as a “catch-all term” for any type of loss that cannot be given a monetary value.
“We’ve got a category of things that are economic – and then we’ve got a category of things that we should really care about. Economics looks pretty unimportant if there’s a risk you’re going to lose your life.”
“Kailash is not the biggest mountain in that area – there are taller mountains – but because of its shape, its look, the sense of spirituality it inspires…if it loses its snow, would it still be Mount Kailash?” asks Janita Gurung, an ecologist who works at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in Kathmandu, Nepal.
“For us, in the mountains, it is not just economic possessions that are important, it’s also the karmic accumulation that you have at the end of your life that’s going to decide how you die or how you feel about dying, right? And going on pilgrimages, doing good things – that is what’s going to contribute to that.”
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