Preposterous,
in my mind, to blame Trump for this but also highly-convenient to
imagine that if America had a different president we wouldn’t have
this problem.
Trump
Lights the Fuse on a Deadly Methane Bomb
13
September, 2018
The
reasons why climate scientists don’t sleep well at night can be
condensed into one word: methane. The current methane situation
within ongoing planet-wide climate change is already dire. In his
ruinous quest to erase the legacy of his predecessor, Donald Trump
intends to make matters even worse.
This
week, the Trump administration gave climate scientists and the rest
of us even more reasons to toss and turn. According to multiple media
reports, Trump’s EPA is proposing to
roll back Obama-era regulations for methane emissions created by oil
and gas wells. Under Obama, methane leaks from drilling sites and
pipelines were closely monitored and immediately dealt with. If Trump
gets his way, those days are over.
Not
to be outdone by the EPA, Trump’s Interior Department is about to
repeal restrictions on the venting and burning of methane — known
as “flaring” — that is created during drilling operations.
As reported by
Truthout journalist Mike Ludwig, the Trump administration has been
seeking to make these disastrous regulatory changes since the day
they got the keys to the building. Now, they are trying again.
These
proposals come on the heels of the EPA’s August proposals to weaken
regulations on the carbon dioxide pollution that is released from
vehicle tailpipes, and to undercut regulations meant to control
pollution from coal-fired power plants. Taken in combination with the
Trump administration’s pro-methane proposals, what we have here is
a giant and highly dangerous step backward in the struggle to blunt
the damage caused by climate change.
Make
no mistake: The preponderance of methane in our atmosphere lubricates
the rails for the nightmare runaway freight train bearing down on us
all. Carbon dioxide is dangerous enough, but methane puts it in deep
shade when it comes to environmental damage. Even the EPA admits the
release of methane is, generally speaking, a very bad thing. The
agency’s official proposal concedes the
move will “degrade air quality and adversely affect health and
welfare.”
“Methane
is reckoned to be at least 30 times more powerful than CO2 at
warming the Earth,” writes Alex
Kirby for Climate News Network, “with some estimates putting its
potency much higher still.” Methane emissions hasten the melting of
the polar ice caps. Without the ice caps, the sun will warm the seas
and kill virtually every living thing in them, but only after those
seas have devoured every coastline on Earth. Global weather patterns
will change dramatically and harshly.
How
much life is left after the full effects of Trump’s
environmental policies are
felt depends on a few factors: General tolerance for prolonged
excessive heat and new diseases, ability to survive unprecedentedly
massive storms, sea life surviving in oceans as warm as hot tubs
after the ice caps disappear for the first time in three million
years, the lethal irony of those oceans overtaking drought-stricken
land with water no one can drink, floodwaters combustible with
petrochemical toxins unleashing algae blooms wherever anything is
wet, massive human displacement, famine, war … in short, take
everything happening right now and increase it by an order of
magnitude, at least.
We
already live beneath a methane Sword of Damocles: The
Arctic/Siberian permafrost has
billions of tons of methane trapped beneath it. That permafrost is
melting right now because of the climate change we have already
caused. The release of that methane is hastening the cycle in the
same way an exploding bomb hastens shrapnel, and no one will be
unharmed when the echo fades.
“The
most significant variable in the Permian
Mass Extinction event,” writes Truthout
journalist Dahr Jamail, “which occurred 250 million years ago and
annihilated 90 percent of all the species on the planet, was methane
hydrate. In the wake of that
mass extinction event,
less than 5 percent of the animal species in the seas lived, and less
than one-third of the large land animal species made it. Nearly all
the trees died.”
2013,” continues Jamail,
“confirmed what (climate scientist Natalia) Shakhova has been
warning us about for years: that a 50-gigaton ‘burp’ of methane
from thawing Arctic permafrost beneath the East Siberian sea is
‘highly possible at any time.’ That would be the equivalent of at
least 1,000 gigatons of carbon dioxide … For perspective,
humans have released approximately 1,475 gigatons in total carbon
dioxide since the year 1850.”
A
gigaton is 1,000,000,000 tons.
Faced
with these challenges, a wise person would immediately take active
steps to ameliorate the danger. First and foremost, one would think,
would be to do everything possible to curb human-created methane
emissions wherever and whenever it can be done. This would seem to be
simple common sense, enlightened self-interest on both a local and
planetary scale. The president of the United States of America is not
a wise man.
This
is hardly the first time Trump has labored to bring about the end of
life on Earth as we know it, but his attempts have not come without
setbacks. Last year, his plan “to put a greater focus on maximizing
fossil fuel production from vast expanses of land and sea under
federal control” took a nifty beating, as reported by
Mike Ludwig. “Environmental and Indigenous groups vowed to fight
Trump at every turn and have
filed a litany of lawsuits challenging
the president’s plans to exploit the nation’s fossil fuel
reserves at the expense of public health and the environment.”
Those
groups won a great many of those fights, and need to again with our
massed and collective assistance if we are to stave off calamity.
Greed and recklessness are one thing. This goes well beyond reckless
greed and into the realm of some sort of mysterious suicide pact
shared by Trump and the billionaire fossil fuel set. Maybe they all
dream of dying on beds of wet money. At this point, any explanation
is plausible.
In
Great Britain, the vulgar term for
breaking wind is “to trump.” It suits, because farts are made of
methane, and this whole thing stinks.
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