Author Archives: Bill Kovarik

Earth Day: A time for faith

The Dalai Lama using modern technology for an ageless message.

Leaders of the world’s religious faiths are   urging a new commitment to environmental healing on this 51st anniversary of Earth Day in the US.

In Rome, Pope Francis I said: “We have been becoming more aware that nature deserves to be protected, even if only because human interaction with God’s biodiversity must take care with utmost care and respect.”

From Dharamsala, India, the Dalai Lama said in an Earth Day statement:
“The earth acts like a mother to us all. Like children, we are dependent on her. In the face of such global problems as the effect of global heating and depletion of the ozone layer, individual organizations and single nations are helpless. Unless we all work together, no solution can be found. Our mother earth is teaching us a lesson in universal responsibility.”

In Britain, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby told an international gathering of faith leaders that the fight against the climate crisis would benefit from the relationship between science and faith.  Welby said (in March, 2021) that “the relationship between science and faith presents us with a very real and a powerful route to lasting, major change. Our global reach, our commitment to local communities and our hope combined with the knowledge and expertise of science can forge a powerful alliance.”

In Israel, the biggest concern of all, according to Rabbi Aaron Lerner, is the future of the world’s environment. “As we celebrate Earth Day and the abundance our planet provides for us every day, we must redouble our efforts and work together to protect our only home,” Lerner said. Meanwhile,  Hebrew University announced   its new Center for Sustainability.

For more announcements, prayers and reflections, see the Earth Day 2021 web site.

Fukushima plus ten

 

By Kiyoshi Kurokawa and Najmedin Meshkati, in TheConversation

Ten years ago, on March 11, 2011, the biggest recorded earthquake in Japanese history hit the country’s northeast coast. It was followed by a tsunami that traveled up to 6 miles (10 kilometers) inland, reaching heights of over 140 feet (43.3 meters) in some areas and sweeping entire towns away in seconds.

This disaster left nearly 20,000 people dead or missing. It also destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station and released radioactive materials over a large area. The accident triggered widespread evacuations, large economic losses and the eventual shutdown of all nuclear power plants in Japan. A decade later, the nuclear industry has yet to fully to address safety concerns that Fukushima exposed.

We are scholars specializing in engineering and medicine and public policy, and have advised our respective governments on nuclear power safety. Kiyoshi Kurokawa chaired an independent national commission, known as the NAIIC, created by the Diet of Japan to investigate the root causes of the Fukushima Daiichi accident. Najmedin Meshkati served as a member and technical adviser to a committee appointed by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences to identify lessons from this event for making U.S. nuclear plants safer and more secure.

Stop the slaughter

Berta Cáceres, Honduran activist killed in 2016. (Photo courtesy Goldman Environmental Prize).

As the year 2020 closes, two more environmental activists are gunned down in Honduras. Although it’s outrageous, it’s also business as usual for timber thieves, hydro dam builders, and owners of mining projects.

Honduran authorities say they are investigating, but not much is expected. Following the 2016 murder of Berta Caceres in Honduras, the government arrested eight men linked to right wing military death squads, but in 2018, the courts suspended their trial.

Global human rights and environmental organizations are deeply appalled and outraged at the ongoing slaughter of environmental leaders and the journalists who cover their concerns.

One response has been the Regional Agreement on Access to Information, Public Participation and Justice in Environmental Matters in Latin America and the Caribbean – known as the Escazú Agreement.  The treaty “aims to combat inequality and discrimination and to guarantee the rights of every person to a healthy environment and to sustainable development”.

But even Chile, where the agreement was first conceived, finds the agreement “inconvenient.”

This is an international human rights issue and, in our view,  the Biden Administration should lead a global investigation, The call to conscience cannot be ignored.

For as full a list as we can make, of names of those murdered while defending the environment, see the page on this Environmental History Timeline.

And in the first few weeks of 2021, another seven names are added to the list.

Joe Biden’s environmental challenge

Joe Biden’s victory in the US 2020 presidential race portends a full 180 degree turn in environmental policy.  The campaign has consistently called climate change the “number one issue facing humanity” and the Biden administration has  vowed a national transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Among the environmental initiatives Biden promised in the campaign:

  • Put into place a $2 trillion plan for infrastructure towards a goal of zero carbon pollution from  electricity by 2035 and net-zero emissions by 2050, the campaign said.
  • Establish an Environmental and Climate Justice Division within the U.S. Department of Justice.
  • End fossil fuel subsidies
  • Rejoin the Paris Climate Accords
  • Reverse Trump climate and environment policy rollbacks in EPA, Dept. of Energy, Interior, Defense and other agencies.
  • Take a science-based approach to air, water, chemical and solid waste pollution through the Environmental Protection Agency
  • Return to fuel efficiency standards for new cars and light trucks
  • Establish an Office of Climate Change and Health Equity at HHS and Launch an Infectious Disease Defense Initiative.

“The first 100 days of the Biden administration are likely to see a flurry of executive actions addressing climate change, as well as a major push to insert clean energy provisions into legislation that could pass with a bipartisan coalition,” says Lisa Friedman of the New York Times.

The founding of Greenpeace


On Sept. 15, 1971, the Phyllis Cormack sailed out of Vancouver to confront nuclear testing by the US government in Amchitka. The boat was renamed the Greenpeace and the concert to help fund the expedition, with James Taylor and Joni Mitchell, sailed into legend.

While no one was watching …

The Trump administration’s impact on environment and health policy, brought to you by the The Earth Institute of Columbia University and the Society of Environmental Journalists.

Global Conversations on Earth Day

 

ALSO:
Appalachian Voice commemorates #EarthDay events on solar and litter pickup, and a screening of Tom Hansell’s After Coal this evening at 6. Visit https://AppVoices.org/earth-day-2020

A virtual earth day 2020

On the 50th anniversary of the original Earth Day — which took place  April 22, 1970 — the world’s religious, scientific and cultural leaders are standing together, especially in the face of a global pandemic, demanding that governments organize intelligently for the future of everyone and everything on Earth.

The Earth Day organization itself — at earthday.org — was initially planning for millions of people gathering in person worldwide.   With the COVID-19 crisis, that is no long possible.

Denis Hayes

“The Earth Day Network staff is working its collective tail off trying to stitch together a significant online stream event that is interesting and educational and inclusive,” said Denis Hayes, a lead organizer in the original Earth Day 1970.  It’s disappointing that it has to be virtual, he said in a recent interview with Inside Climate News. “In terms of political impact, there is simply no substitute for a billion people in the streets.”  In a Seattle Times Op-Ed, Hayes wrote:

The 2020 election will determine whether America will come again to cherish sound science, respect expertise, revere innovators and assume its leadership role in protecting the planet from climate devastation. Essentially, all climate scientists agree that we are approaching irreversible tipping points that threaten to permanently impoverish not just the human prospect but the entire web of life.

Still, virtual events have their own dynamic and advantages. For example, an interfaith religious service was held Sunday April 19 at -5 UTC with leaders from Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Latter-Day Saints, Muslim, Sikh, Unitarian Universalist and other spiritual communities sharing their traditions’ gifts through sacred text, commentary, and song, and call us to collective action. It was streamed through the National Cathedral and  Interfaith Power and Light’s virtual link.  A similar service will be held Wednesday April 22.

 

Exxon knew? Well, so did everyone else

Bisson brothers: Ascent of Mt. Blanc, August 1859. This glacier is, like most others, far smaller today.

(Based on a “works in progress” session at the March, 2o17 American Journalism Historians Association conference at New York University.)  

The history of climate change research has taken on a growing relevance thanks to investor fraud lawsuits and investigations by the Center for International Environmental Law, among others.  

The suits accuse Exxon-Mobil Oil Corp. of working to deny and dismiss climate change science and engage in unethical political action despite having had a scientific understanding of climate change “as early as”  1977 or 1968). The research grew into an “Exxon Knew” campaign. It was greeted with enthusiasm by  environmentalists like Al Gore and Bill  McKibben and (not surprisingly) with skepticism by Independent Petroleum Association of America and by Exxon-Mobil itself.   

One issue seems to be when Exxon knew climate change involved the buildup of C02 from fossil fuels. Many of the “Exxon Knew”  stories start along these lines: “In the 1960s, the American Petroleum Institute (and / or Exxon) made a troubling discovery.”  In 2021, Vermont senator Bernie Sanders released a video in which he noted that “Exxon knew” all about climate change “as long as 40 years ago.” 

While all of this is true, it simply ignores the broader context of ongoing scientific research. If  Exxon researchers knew about climate change, what about the rest of the engineering and scientific community?  Glaciology and atmospheric physics are hardly young sciences.  The fact is that Exxon scientists simply confirmed what was already well established.   

Climate variability has been a constant topic of research across the related scientific communities for a century and a half. Scientists concerned with climatology and glaciology and many associated geophysical sciences have studied climate change for generations.   

One of the most outstanding discoveries in the long history of climate variability research was Charles Keeling’s observations from Mauna Loa in Hawaii, starting in 1958. The observations showed dramatic and irrefutable evidence of  atmospheric accumulation of CO2.  

Also in 1958, famed Hollywood director Frank Capra included a   warning about CO2 accumulation in an educational film made for Disney television called “Unchained Goddess.

For more detail from this time period, historian Spencer Weart’s “Discovery of Global Warming” is an excellent resource. Other aspects of the history are discoverable in a long-running climate science blog called “Real Climate.”  One of that blog’s contributors who is also one of the world’s leading climate scientists, Stefan Rahmstorf,  wrote recently about a November 1965 report to President Johnson that warned about fossil fuels and C02 buildup.   

The concern goes back even more than these histories demonstrate. 

For example, the Washington Post carried an article May 4, 1953 on a Gilbert Plass paper at American Geophysical Union, quoting him specifically pointing to fossil fuel use as increasing climate warming.  Plass and other atmospheric scientists regularly published on these and related topics, with much of that generation’s research converged in the International Geophysical Year (1957-58).

But it goes back even further. In March, 1912 Popular Mechanics published “Remarkable Weather of 1911: The Effect of Combustion of Coal on the Climate: What Scientists Predict.”   This got picked up by an obscure Australian newspaper called the Rodney & Otamatra Times in August 1912, and this is the article that is often passed around on the internet and social media. It’s verbatim from the Popular Mechanics article. 

Going back even further still, in the 1896 – 1908 time frame, Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius published a number of articles, and a book, Worlds in the Making, that involved climate and the problem of  C02 accumulation.    

The very earliest scientific paper on climate and fossil fuels that we know of was read at an 1856 conference. In the paper,  Eunice Newton Foote predicted that CO2 was changing the climate.   

It’s not about Exxon. 

So, let’s not confine the discussion to Exxon’s scientists.  When we focus on the issue that “Exxon knew” as early as the 1970s or 80s, we ignore the long trail of scientific discovery beforehand, and we leave the field open to highly selective interpretations of trends.   

Clearly, the oil industry knew they were causing climate change before fueling the great climate change coverup and public relations barrage, but it was not their discovery. They were only reacting to real climate science, not leading it. 

Perhaps this makes what “Exxon knew” even worse, since their own researchers were only confirming and expanding on what was already well known.  But the fact is that the scientific research arm of Exxon did its job. The political and policy divisions are the ones who decided to deny and obfuscate the data.      

 

 

Feather heist

A pattern for a fishing tie. Flute player Edwin Rist stole hundreds of Alfred Wallace’s bird specimens from the 1860s to resell to obsessed fly tiers.

A million dollars worth of exotic bird feathers, collected in the 19th century and kept in a scientific museum, was stolen by a flute player in 2008.   An extraordinary story about under-funded science, over-amped fly tying, and indifferent police.

See This American Life, Jan. 19, 2020. The story is based on the book “The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century” by Kirk Wallace Johnson.