Are
Alberta’s Tar Sands prepared for a torrential rain event?
Paul Beckwith
10
October, 2013
In
recent months we have endured incredible tropical-equatorial-like
torrential rain events occurring at mid-latitudes across the planet.
For example, in North America we experienced intense rainfall in the
Banff region of the Rockies from June 19th to 24th and the enormous
volume of water moved downhill through the river systems taking out
small towns and running into the heart of Calgary where it caused
$5.3 billion dollars of infrastructure
damage; the largest in Canadian history.
Next,
it was Toronto’s turn, with 75 mm of rain falling from 5 to 6pm on
July 8 (with up to 150 mm overall in some regions) leading to
widespread flooding and $1.45 billion dollars in damages. As bad as
these events were, they were dwarfed by the intense
rainfalls
hitting the state of Colorado from Sept 9th to 15th.
Rainfall
amounts that would normally fall over 6 months to a year were
experienced in less than a week. Widespread flash floods, landslides,
and torrents of water ripped apart roads, fracking equipment and
pipelines on (at least) hundreds of fossil fuel sites
(mostly ignored by mainstream media)
(http://www.desmogblog.com/2013/09/19/media-ignores-damaged-oil-and-gas-tanks-colorado-floods).
The level of destruction was simply horrifying, as
captured
by a man with a plane and a camera. But we have no grounds for
complaint, since the widespread flooding in central Europe from May
30th to June 6th caused a much larger $22 billion in damages.
So
what is happening? Why are we experiencing so many of these severe
weather flooding events that are supposed to only occur every 1000
years or so? Will they keep occurring? What city will be hit next?
Can the Alberta tar sands be hit by such an event? What would be the
implications?
Abrupt
Climate Change In Real-Time
Humans
have benefited greatly from a stable climate for the last 11,000
years - roughly 400 generations. Not anymore. We now face an angry
climate. One that we have poked in the eye with our fossil fuel stick
and awakened. Now we must deal with the consequences. We must set
aside our differences and prepare for what we can no longer avoid.
And that is massive disruption to our civilizations.
In
a nutshell, the logical chain of events occurring is as follows:
A)
Greenhouse gases that humans are putting into the atmosphere from
burning fossil fuels are trapping
extra heat in the earth system (distributed between the oceans (93%),
the cryosphere (glaciers, ice sheets, sea ice for 3%), the earth
surface (rocks, vegetation, etc. for 3%) and the atmosphere (only an
amazingly low 1%). The oceans clearly get the lions share of the
energy, and if that 1% heating the atmosphere varies there can be
decades of higher or lower warming, as we have seen recently.. This
water vapor rises and cools condensing into clouds and releasing its
stored latent heat which is increasing storm intensity.
B)
(i)Rapidly declining Arctic sea ice (losing about 12% of volume per
decade) and (ii)snow cover (losing about 22% of coverage in June per
decade) and (iii)darkening of Greenland all cause more solar
absorption on the surface and thus amplified Arctic warming (global
temperatures have increased (on average) about 0.17 oC
per decade, the Arctic has increased > 1 oC
per decade, or about 6x faster)
C)
Equator-to-Arctic temperature difference is thus decreasing rapidly
D)
Less heat transfer occurs from equator to pole (via atmosphere, and
thus jet streams become streakier and wavier and slower in
west-to-east direction, and via ocean currents (like Gulf Stream,
which slows and overruns continental shelf on Eastern seaboard of
U.S.)
E)
Storms (guided by jet streams) are slower and sticking and with more
water content are dumping huge torrential rain quantities on cities
and widespread regions at higher latitudes than is “normal”.
F)
A relatively rare meteorological event called an “atmospheric
river” is now much more common, and injects huge quantities of
water over several days to specific regions, such as Banff (with
water running downhill to Calgary) and Toronto and Colorado events.
It
is well past the time that politicians and governments need to act to
address these issues. This breakdown of the global atmospheric
circulation pattern is well underway now, with a global average
temperature only 0.8 oC
above the pre-industrial revolution levels. With extreme weather
events this terrible now, it is highly irrational, in fact reckless,
to continue to have global meetings and discussions about whether or
not 2 oC
is safe. Only 0.8 oC
is wreaking havoc on global infrastructure today. As climate change
proceeds and accelerates and we move further from the stable state
that we are familiar with (“old climate”) to a much warmer world
(‘new climate”) we will experience worsening weather extremes and
a huge “whiplashing” of events (throughout our present
“transition period”).
For
a notion of whiplashing, consider the Mississippi River. There were
record river flow rates from high river basin rainfall in 2011,
followed by record drought and record low river water levels in
December, 2012 making it necessary for the U.S. Army Corp of
Engineers to hydraulically break apart rock on the riverbed to keep
the countries vital economic transportation link open to barge
traffic. Then, 6 months later, the river was back up to record
levels. Incredible swings of fortune.
Mitigation
at a global level is dysfunctional and inadequate
Adaption
has not worked out too well for Calgary, or Toronto, or Colorado, or
numerous
other places.
Let us not be surprised when a similar torrential rain event hits
Ottawa, or Vancouver, or even the Alberta tar sand tailing ponds. In
Alberta, tailings ponds would be breached and the toxic waters would
overflow the Athabasca River and carry the pollutants up into the
north to exit into the Arctic Ocean. Such an event would be
catastrophic to the environment and economy of Canada.
How
can this risk be ignored? Will the latest IPCC (Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change) report
AR5
released on September 27th once again be ignored by society?
Paul
Beckwith is a part-time professor with the laboratory for
paleoclimatology and climatology, department of geography, University
of Ottawa. He teaches second year climatology/meteorology. His PhD
research topic is “Abrupt climate change in the past and present.”
He holds an M.Sc. in laser physics and a B.Eng. in engineering
physics and reached the rank of chess master in a previous life. More
from Paul
Beckwith's Blog.
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