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How bad will the Northwest get clobbered by climate change?

Changing weather patterns have already started in the Pacific Northwest and will continue to get worse over the next few decades. According the climate report released by the White House on June 16, 2009—global warming is real and is caused by human activity. The Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States is the most comprehensive 197 page report done on the subject, which started in 2007 and involved the participation of 13 science and environmental groups.

The Northwest region will experience increased rain and snow in winter and hotter, dryer days in summer. The regional averaged temperature rose about 1.5 degrees during the last century and is expected to increase by up to 3-10 degrees over the next century.

I-5 off ramp under water at Centralia, Washington

The images of flooding in the Centralia/Chehalis area, which closed Interstate 5 for days during the last two winters, could become an annual scene. Long lines of trucks transporting products to Seattle were delayed for several days, losing approximately 4 million dollars a day. Record snow storms paralyzed the city of Seattle, which received massive criticism for the snow plow debacle and the reaction of a government totally unprepared for repeated back-to-back snow and ice bombardment.

All major rivers have flooded their banks in the past two winters, causing billions of dollars in destruction and damage. Intense thunder and lightening storms knocked out power to thousands of homes in most counties through out the Western region. Some areas were without electricity for weeks at a time, creating intense hardship on entire communities.

Conversely, during the summer, wildfires have increased dramatically, due to hotter, windier conditions and the increase of drought thinkquesttree-killer insects drawn to drier climates, which leave large swaths of dead, fire-prone trees. The acreage burned in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana, could double by the year 2020, according to a study released by the University of Washington in 2007.

This summer, while the Midwest is experiencing the wettest June in many years, and the US Golf open in New York was cut short by rain, Western Washington’s farmers are faced with the potential of starting crop irrigation two weeks earlier than normal, due to a record tie for 29 straight days without measurable rain fall.

The Northwest region’s water supply infrastructure was built with the expectation that water needed for summer agriculture, industrial, and recreational needs would be stored naturally in the Cascade mountain snow pack. Reduced snow pack in years to come will put a tremendous strain on the needs of the population, river flow, and food supply.

Aquatic ecosystems that protect salmon and steelhead will continue to degrade. Studies from the White House climate report suggest that approximately one-third of the salmon and cold water fish species will no longer have suitable habitat in which tosalmon photo Bullsheet wordpress reproduce and recover, if temperatures stay on the current path until the end of the century.

“Climate change and ocean acidification are already having major impacts on Washington,” said Senator Maria Cantwell, (D-WA), “Our $100 million shellfish industry is in crisis after four years of oyster reproductive failure from ocean acidification."

The potential for species extinction will become accelerated as more native plants, animals, and biodiversity fail to adapt fast enough to habitat, precipitation, and temperature changes.

Predictions are that warmer summers will also increase power demands as air conditioning becomes imperative to human health and comfort. The young and the elderly will be especially vulnerable to elements of climate change, pollution, and exposure to extreme hot and cold.

Furthermore, the White House report predicts higher sea levels in the Northwest, which would accelerate coastal erosion. The heavily populated areas of Seattle, Tacoma, and Olympia, will be the most vulnerable. Also, countless coastal resort, fishing, and tourist towns like Ocean Shores, Westport, Neah Bay, and Sea Side, will eventually be in jeopardy, if global climate regulation isn’t implemented in time.

In anticipation of climate change impact; states, counties, and cities in the Northwest, have began making preparations and those plans are being accelerated as the need for urgency has increased. Strategies are under way to conserve water supplies, maximize hydroelectric power, preserve forests, protect infrastructure, improve flood prevention, stabilize aging levies, implement better response to snow fall and mud slides, and adopt measures to safeguard human health.

Rep. Jay Inslee (D-WA) member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, who recently announced energy funding for Washington has referred to the state as "the alpha and the omega of global warming.” Inslee said, “These investments will cut our national carbon emissions and keep Washington on the cutting-edge of the clean energy revolution.”

Meanwhile, the city of Olympia relocated their primary drinking water source to wells on higher ground and adjusted the plans for a new City Hall to be built at a higher location, with a one foot increase in the building’s foundation.

How bad, indeed--will Seattle ultimately become another New Orleans built over water or will the green state of Washington evolve into another golden California?

***

Related aritcles:

Climate change in the Northwest?  Just look around

Northwest salmon rescued by dam removal?

White House report: global warming is real and caused by human activity

Global warming blamed for increased human misery and death

For photo credit run cursor over photograph *Copyright Jean Williams 2009* contact information: creatinggreenpiece@juno.com
 

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, Seattle Environmental Policy Examiner

Jean Williams has lived in the Seattle area for 34 years. Her environmental and wildlife articles have been published in magazines, newspapers and Internet publications, including Seattle Magazine, Critters USA and Neighborhood America.

Comments

  • Dave 2 years ago

    Jean, if you just don't like the rain, you should move out of Seattle and head to Nevada. Someone should have told you that it rained a lot out here before you came. Go on home.

    "Climate Change" is it now? What a bunch of BS, but hard to prove that the climate doesn't change due to man, as the natural variations can be large.

    I think the silliness of your article was beyond comment, but I was suckered into this.

  • Peter T 2 years ago

    Dave, I don't see the connection of your insult to the author, who is writing a factual account of events and doesn't make any personal remarks about not liking the rain. Did you even read it? Or, do you just prefer to make up stuff to try and be ridiculously clever?

    You may not be interested in the facts about global warming and climate change, or just choose to believe your own rhetoric, but your baseless and pompous remarks only succeeded to make you look small,foolish, and ignorant.

  • Geno Canto del Halcon 2 years ago

    While the salmon may have a difficult time adjusting, we humans have the possibility of adapting (except for those who are too ignorant to see the threat). For example, we need to be building more water impoundments high in the Cascades, above the salmon runs, to compensate for the declining snow packs (yes, declining due to shorter, warmer winters, on average, for at least 60 years, now). The impoundments could also be used to generate electrical power using small hydro generators. SnoPUD and others are already seriously considering many such projects. As for rising sea level, we need to quit building stuff near sea level, or make it clear to folks that when the waves wash away their dream homes, the government is not going to rebuild them. As for the highways that are frequently flooded? Relocate to higher ground, or build them on causeways like folks down south learned to do long ago.

  • Stacy LaFontaine 2 years ago

    Geno, I agree and you have some good points. I am optimistic, because the state of Washington has government officials who take climate change seriously and are already preparing for adaptions that will have to be made. But we also need the clean energy bill passed and it is meeting plenty of resistance from Republicans and Democrats, who are swaying under the pressure of agricultural lobbies. We don't want to hurt our farmers, but if we don't do something to start changing the course of global warming, there won't be anything but deserts left and it's real hard to grow crops there.

    As for the post from Dave, why would you even assume that Jean Williams "moved" here? I don't know her, therefore I wouldn't assume she wasn't born and raised in Washington state. That does actually happen,you know.

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