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When it comes to climate change, are we doomed? It sure looks that way, but we can do something about it • Asheville Watchdog
One of these days, I promise, I’ll spread some Christmas cheer.
But today, my gift is a little, well, doom-ish. Before you fire off an email calling me Scrooge McChristmaskiller, hear me out.
I’m going to recap a fascinating climate discussion held earlier this month, which included high-profile scientists — and a touch of hopeful news. Sure, overall it’s a little bleak, but we have the power to make it less so.
How’s that for a sales pitch?
On Dec. 4, Congregation Beth HaTephila and several other sponsors brought in prominent climate scientist and energy systems analyst Zeke Hausfather, described pre-event as a “world-class, oft quoted climate scientist.” Local climate scientists David Easterling of the National Centers for Environmental Information in Asheville; and Andrew Jones, executive director and cofounder of Climate Interactive in Asheville, also presented to a packed house at The Collider downtown.
To give you a dose of hope early on, I’ll tell you Jones pitched the En-ROADS Climate Solutions Simulator, which is super cool and lets you play around with potential climate solutions and see how much various options can reduce global temperatures. Give it a try.
But here’s the bad news. Hausfather noted that between the 1850s, when reliable global temperature records became available, and the early 1900s, temperatures “went up and down year to year, but there wasn’t really that much of a change.’’
“But since 1970 the earth’s temperature has been rising fairly rapidly,” Hausfather said. “And now, as of 2024, we’re seeing temperatures close to 1.5 degrees (Celsius) above pre-industrial levels.
“And these levels of temperatures, just like levels of CO2, are unprecedented for a very long period in the Earth’s history. So temperatures today are probably higher than we’ve seen for at least 120,000 years, potentially further back than that.”
OK, have a great week. I’m getting on a rocketship for a trip to a reserve Earth-like planet in the Goldilocks zone. I’m pretty sure Elon Musk is moving there, too.
Seriously, Hausfather’s statistics aren’t good, especially when you consider 1.5 degrees Celsius is 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit – and when you consider that about 40 percent of the carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere stays there, which means temperatures will likely stay up for a while.
“Certainly, we know that if temperatures stay at today’s levels, they will be there for a century or so,” Hausfather said.
All of this ties in locally because we keep having warmer seasons and we have an increased chance of more devastating storms like Helene, which caused extensive flooding, landslides, and loss of life Sept. 27. We also see more heavy rains in general, as well as droughts that contribute to wildfires out west.
This all comes down to human activity – everything from using coal-burning power plants and factories to driving gas-powered vehicles.
Climate change: We’re the cause of it
I’m always amazed when people don’t believe global warming is real, or they acknowledge it is happening but say there’s no way people are causing it. Hausfather addressed the latter first.
“So I often get a question from people when I’m talking about climate change, of, ‘How could humans really affect the climate? It’s so big.’” Hausfather said. “Planet Earth is so massive, and I think people don’t really understand just how big an impact humans have had in terms of the atmosphere.”
We really like to burn fossil fuels, which emit a lot of carbon dioxide.
“We have burned a mind-numbing amount of carbon,” Hausfather said. “We have burned about 2.6 trillion tons of carbon dioxide since the Industrial Revolution, the vast majority of that in the form of fossil fuels.”
We’re also proficient at removing trees, which consume CO2 and produce oxygen, and that is cooking our own goose, too.
Hausfather put those 2.6 trillion tons of carbon dioxide in perspective.
“That’s roughly the same amount of mass as every living thing on earth, plus everything ever made by humans — the pyramids, all of our roads, all of our buildings combined,” he said. “We have burned that much carbon and put that much carbon dioxide up into the atmosphere, and that’s dramatically changed the composition of our atmosphere.
“Now, about 40 percent of that carbon dioxide has accumulated in the atmosphere, about 1.1 trillion tons. The remainder, thankfully, has been absorbed back into the Earth’s system, primarily into the ocean and into the biosphere.”
That’s good, because climate change “would be twice as bad if the earth weren’t helping clean up some of our mess,” he noted, adding that Earth is getting worse at cleaning up our mess.
Scientists can study tree rings, stalactites, ocean corals and ice cores for information on global temperatures going way back, before recorded history.
I kind of wish they hadn’t.
“We have not seen a period in the Earth’s history where carbon dioxide concentrations have been this high for at least over 3 million years, potentially 4 million,” Hausfather said. “And in the period where it was much higher, the earth’s temperature was much, much hotter than it is today.”
Today, we can measure the effects of our human activities, so it’s not like declaring what’s fueling global warming is speculation.
“This isn’t just supercomputer models that we throw a bunch of fancy equations into,” Hausfather said. “We can measure this. We can measure it by satellites. We can measure it by ground sensors.”
It gets worse, because we’re pumping out other greenhouse gas emissions like methane and nitrous oxide that contribute to warming, as well as aerosols, such as sulfur dioxide emissions, that are essentially suspended particles in the atmosphere.
“These get a lot of press because of their really bad health impacts,” Hausfather said. “Somewhere around 7 million people die each year globally, particularly in Asia, from outdoor air pollution, and most of that is particulate matter that is derived from sulfur dioxide.”
Because sulfur dioxide reflects light back into space, it actually cools the climate, he said, describing “global dimming,” which happens because the sky is so hazy, particularly in Asia.
This is also really bad, because it masks some of the warming we’ve had.
Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah! And brace yourself …
We’ve got to clean up the pollution, Hausfather said, which is mostly caused by burning fossil fuels, to solve climate change.
“But this does create a dilemma for us, because as we clean up the air and as we switch away from fossil fuels, a lot of additional warming that we’ve been masking is going to come back to bite us, and that’s a challenge,” Hausfather said.
I’ve got to imagine this guy has single handedly killed more parties than Charles Manson.
The effects on storms like Helene
But hey, we haven’t even gotten to the Helene stuff!
If you warm the planet by one degree Celsius, you get about 7 percent heavier rainfall, the scientist told us.
“Now for tropical cyclones or hurricanes … we see a magnification of somewhere closer to 10 to 15 percent increased rainfall from these intense storms and hurricanes in a warming world,” Hausfather said.
How big an impact this had on Helene is still an area of active scientific research, he noted, although a few early studies have pegged the increased rainfall due to climate change at 10 to 50 percent. It clearly had an effect, though Helene would’ve been catastrophic any way you slice it.
Easterling, who lives in northern Henderson County, pointed out that during Helene and the precipitation a couple days before, his gauge recorded 15 inches of rain.
That exceeded the 1,000-year rainfall amount by about 3 inches. Easterling noted these thresholds for 1,000-year events or 100-year or 500-year events are based on older data, and even an update coming in the next few years is probably going to underestimate future intensity of rainfall.
“The bottom line is, as the atmosphere warms, there’s more moisture in the air, and that (increased) moisture in the air is available to rain out in heavier events,” Easterling said.
It gets a bit worse, as Hausfather noted when he continued.
“The last two years, 2023 and 2024, have been particularly exceptional,” he said, pointing to one of his many charts. “And so we are well above anything we’ve seen previously in the climate, even in the last few decades.”
Scientists aren’t quite sure why.
This year, some parts of the world are going to come in a little bit above 1.5 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels, “which is the sort of temperature target the world set itself during the Paris agreement to, ideally, not exceed.” That refers to the 2015 Paris Climate Accords.
“You know, we don’t want to be pushing up against that target already, especially this early,” Hausfather said. “And these big jumps in temperature have really pushed us there.”
The entire planet is on track to breach the 1.5 degree limits in the next decade, perhaps as early as the late 2020s or early 2030s, Hausfather said. The goal from Paris was to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius and preferably 1.5 degrees.
To do that now, Hausfather said, we’d have to cut global emissions to zero over the next decade.
There is some hope
If you think this talk was dark thus far, keep in mind I’ve left out a fair amount of detail. Even Hausfather acknowledged he could’ve been wearing a black cloak and toting a sickle.
“So that’s kind of the grim side of the talk, but I’m going to leave you guys with a little bit of optimistic things, too, because it’s not all doom and gloom,” Hausfather said.
Global carbon dioxide emissions have flattened over the last decade and the reasons are encouraging.
“A big part of it is that we’ve succeeded in making clean energy cheap,” Hausfather said. “Things like solar energy are the cheapest form of new energy in almost all the world today. The cost of solar batteries have fallen by more than 90 percent over the last decade. Cost of wind (power) has fallen.”
Electric vehicles, bikes, heat pumps, and more have become ubiquitous, especially in China.
“And the world is spending a lot more money on clean energy,” Hausfather said.
Clearly, we cannot become complacent, and we have to do more.
Jones, the Climate Interactive co-founder, had the audience shout out ways we can “bend the curve” — bring those global temperatures down. We all made suggestions for the En-ROADS page. There, you can move slider bars up or down on all kinds of potential ways to help, ranging from curbing deforestation and agricultural emission to boosting energy efficiency and employing more electrification.
Boost renewable energy and cut coal usage, and the increase in global temperature drops.
It’s pretty cool to watch, and the graphics are great. And it showed we can drop the warming.
Buy an electric lawn mower (on my list for the spring), an electric vehicle, or at least a hybrid. Maybe buy an electric bike, or get a more efficient heat pump or refrigerator.
Yes, this night was sobering, and a little depressing. But the situation is not hopeless.
We just can’t keep doing nothing and hoping for the best.
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. John Boyle has been covering Asheville and surrounding communities since the 20th century. You can reach him at (828) 337-0941, or via email at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org. The Watchdog’s local reporting during this crisis is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Abundant Life Christian School Shooting: A teacher and student are dead and 6 others are wounded
SUMMARY: A 15-year-old student opened fire during a study hall at a Madison school, killing two people—a teacher and a student—while several others were hospitalized. Two students remain in critical condition. The suspect died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Investigators are processing the scene, searching the suspect’s home, and interviewing his father. They are also verifying his social media profile. A vigil is planned in the community, which continues to pray for the victims still recovering in the hospital. Authorities are working to understand the motive behind the shooting.
A teacher and student are dead and six others are wounded after another student opened fire inside a study hall classroom at a Madison, Wisconsin, elementary school. Police say the shooter, who died from what is believed to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound, was a 15-year-old girl. NBC’s Shaquille Brewster has the latest. (Credit: NBC)
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Will Asheville Muni get FEMA funding for storm renovations? Bike lanes, sidewalks in rebuilt Swannanoa River Road area? Why is I-26 marked east/west when it runs north/south? • Asheville Watchdog
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies, and the real answers:
Question: I recently played Asheville Muni and heard some good news about restoration. It sounds like FEMA will pay for restoring the front nine of the golf course that was destroyed in Helene. Is this correct? Is this in exchange for using the front nine as a potential debris storage site? Also, what is the timetable for restoring the front nine? And what’s the estimated cost?
My answer: I’m still a little flabbergasted that Helene managed to take down hundreds of thousands of trees in western North Carolina but left standing the one stupid tree I hit every single time off the tee on number 13. Every time.
Real answer: Let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves. Chris Corl, the city of Asheville’s director of community and regional entertainment facilities, said there’s not “a lot of certainty yet related to the future of the course.”
“We are working towards a restoration of the Muni; however, to be clear, we still have yet to fully identify funding for the project,” Corl said. “It is assumed that FEMA public assistance funding will be available to restore the front nine of the course, however, not yet confirmed.”
The Muni, designed by noted golf course architect Donadl Ross, dates to 1927 and has a rich history. The front nine, parts of which border Swannanoa River Road, sustained heavy damage from Helene, including multiple greens that were destroyed and fairways laden with a heavy deposit of silt.
The city is working with a consulting firm, Hagerty Consulting, “to work through the process, starting with an official damage assessment.” The city did agree to let the front nine be used to store storm debris, but that “does not have anything to do with the restoration project,” Corl said.
“We don’t have a timeline yet for the project and, unfortunately, we don’t have a timeline for the timeline,” Corl said. “Our operator, Commonwealth Golf Partners, has been working on construction estimates for us to understand the potential costs associated.”
The repairs will be extensive — and expensive.
“Depending on the final scope and scale of the project, we’re currently estimating costs between $5 million and $7 million, the bulk of these expenses being full replacement of the irrigation system and repair and replacement of sections of stormwater piping,” Corl said. “For clarity, the new stormwater work completed this past summer was not damaged in the storm.”
The city had just completed a lot of work on the course before Helene hit Sept. 27. Pre-Helene, the city had secured nearly $3 million for repairs and upgrades to the historic course, and it had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on new bunkers and tee boxes, upgraded greens, and trimming and removing trees.
But not the one that overhangs the 13th fairway.
Question: Since Swannanoa River Road was completely destroyed near the WNC Nature Center and is being rebuilt from scratch, any chance they’re leaving enough room for a sidewalk or bike lane? People used to walk and bike that curve all the time, even at night. The Greenway master plan includes this section, connecting the Nature Center/Rec Pool/Azalea Park with Biltmore Village and the existing Wilma Dykeman Greenway. I live near the VA hospital and have been patiently waiting for that section of the greenway to be completed so I can more safely ride my bike to UNCA.
My answer: I’m pretty sure Tunnel Road to I-240 would be a much faster route, but if you’d prefer not to take your life into your own hands, I understand.
Real answer: The destruction in this area, evident in the photo the reader sent in, is pretty mind-boggling. The NCDOT is on the job, but it’s getting the basics done first.
“The completed repairs — building the road back wide enough for two 11-foot lanes and guardrail — are temporary repairs,” NCDOT spokesperson David Uchiyama said via email. “The permanent repairs will follow in the near future.”
Uchiyama pointed out that Helene is the costliest storm in the history of the North Carolina Department of Transportation.
“The damage in many highway corridors across western North Carolina, requiring restoration of infrastructure within federal reimbursement guidelines, continue to be our primary focus,” Uchiyama said. “Federal Emergency Funds cover most, but not all, of the cost to replace lost infrastructure.”
Improvements such as sidewalks and bike lanes along the roadway the reader asked about remain a possibility further into the future.
“Sidewalks and bike lanes that were not in place before the storm damage are considered ‘betterments,” Uchiyama said. “Local NCDOT engineers are engaged with our federal partners to determine if any types of betterment are eligible for federal assistance, or if alternative funding is available to cover cost of betterments during the reconstruction process.”
Question: In the United States, interstate highways are even-numbered for east-west routes and odd-numbered for north-south routes. On a map, I-26 is way more north-south in its projected route. Why the even number and east-west signage?
My answer: On a map, I-26 always looks uncrowded, too. I’m more concerned about that.
Real answer: This question arises periodically, I suspect, from people who move here and realize this corridor through Asheville really does not run east-west at all. They are not wrong.
I went back to Uchiyama for this one, and he noted that the American Association of State Highway Transportation Officials developed the procedure for numbering interstate routes in the 1950s.
“I-26 began running east-west from Charleston to Columbia in 1960,” Uchiyama said, referring to those cities in South Carolina. “The interstate expanded from there. The path of I-26 — whether created just for the interstate or as other highways expanded and absorbed the identification — then expanded out from Columbia to what we know it as today.”
I-26 used to end in Asheville, but it’s been extended into northern Buncombe as “Future I-26,” then into Madison County with a new section of I-26 built in the early part of this century and through Tennessee, where it eventually meets up with Interstate 81.
In other words, it’s sort of evolved from what was mostly an east-west highway into what it is today.
Uchiyama cited the Federal Highway Administration, which notes, “An occasional inconsistency is inevitable in a complicated, evolving network. They cause little difficulty for the traveling public. Most motorists are not aware of the numbering pattern; when driving in areas with which they are unfamiliar, motorists choose routes based on maps, signs, or directions received along the way.”
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Got a question? Send it to John Boyle at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org or 828-337-0941. His Answer Man columns appear each Tuesday and Friday. The Watchdog’s reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
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The post Will Asheville Muni get FEMA funding for storm renovations? Bike lanes, sidewalks in rebuilt Swannanoa River Road area? Why is I-26 marked east/west when it runs north/south? • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
From $20 to $500: Best gift gadgets for the cook
SUMMARY: During the holiday season, family gatherings and cooking increase, prompting gift-giving. Consumer Reports’ Tanya Christian highlights essential kitchen gadgets for gifting. An air fryer, especially the colorful Tabitha Brown model, is praised for enhancing food textures without frying. The Ninja Lux espresso machine offers café-quality drinks, while the Any Day microwavable cookware set provides convenient and aesthetically pleasing meal prep. A $20 Kyo Sarah mandolin slicer makes an excellent stocking stuffer. Additionally, affordable gifts like dish towels, citrus squeezers, and new oven mitts can also make thoughtful presents, proving that special kitchen items don’t have to be expensive.
It’s that time of year — more gatherings, more cooking, more eating and more gift-giving! The experts at Consumer Reports culled a list of some of their favorite cooking and kitchen gadgets — just in time for gifting or rounding out your own kitchen for the holidays.
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