[imc-st.louis] [Fwd: [stl-building] St. Louis's Ultra Storm]
Mark
mberry at riseup.net
Fri Jul 28 13:54:21 PDT 2006
---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: [stl-building] St. Louis's Ultra Storm
From: Fitzdon at aol.com
Date: Fri, July 28, 2006 10:16 am
To: imc-stl-building at lists.indymedia.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
from this mornings' CounterPunchâ¦
http://counterpunch.com/fitz07282006.html
July 28, 2006
Half Hour Hurricanes
Where were the Warnings About St. Louis's Ultra Storm?
By DON FITZ
As clips of hurricane-strength winds uprooting trees across St. Louis in late
July made national news, many commentators spoke of the awesome power of
nature. But this storm was not an act of god. It was an act of
Exxon-Mobile and
its friends. And they are not gods, even if they are treated as such by the
White House.
Where were the warnings?
At 6:30 pm the evening of July 19, I get to the Green Party office. As I
suspect, no one has turned on the air conditioner and the thermostat is at it
maximum reading of 95 degrees. I plug it in and head outside to eat in the
shade.
By 7 pm, it's cooled to 89 degrees and people have arrived to discuss our
strategy on lead poisoning.
About 30 minutes later, Jasmine looks out the window, asking, "Have you seen
that? I think we need to go to the basement." Peering out, I see that blue
skies with fluffy white clouds have turned to dark grey in a matter of
minutes.
Trash is blowing in a weird way  not in a whirlwind but in a big circle,
maybe
30 or 40 feet in diameter. Rick's daughter, Bethany, is scared and wants to
go to the basement too.
"Okay, here's my flashlight for everyone who wants to go downstairs." I hand
it to them, glad that enough are staying to complete the letter to Lead Safe
St. Louis.
Ziah comes in, apologizing for being late. "Sorry, but I had to drive around
branches that were all over the street. Just a few blocks from here, a tree
fell right behind my car. It would have hit me if I had come a few seconds
later."
As we talk about potential allies against lead poisoning, the air conditioner
and one light go out. A few minutes later the last light goes out and there
is a general exodus.
I gather up the Greens' newsletter, the Compost-Dispatch, that we were going
to mail and head to the first floor. Jasmine, digger and I sit in the doorway
folding and stapling newsletters. Tinker, an eight year old from the
neighborhood, comes in and shows us her skill at putting on stamps. Cops
go by asking
if anyone has been hurt while city chain saw crews remove trees from Cherokee
street.
The storm didn't seem real until it was over, maybe 30 minutes later. Needing
to know if my organic garden needs water, I carefully watch the weather
reports. But I couldn't remember any storm warnings. At home with no
electricity, I
look through the paper for the forecast for that day: "Humidity will be very
high and the excessive heat warning remains in effect." Nothing about the
possibility of a storm, not even a mention of rain or wind in the forecast.
Talking to Roger Hill, a meteorological consultant for Weathering Heights in
Worcester, Vermont, I said that, during my 30 plus years in St. Louis, I had
never seen such extreme weather with no warning at all. He jumped in, "If you
are wondering if it's part of global warming, the answer is yes."
He explained that storms are a balancing of energy between the rising of
low-lying, humid warm air and the sinking of colder air. Extra warmth
makes the
balancing more extreme. The ongoing warming of the earth causes stronger
upward
and downward motions of air masses, which results in more violent wind and
rain. Hill, who does weather forecasting for five radio stations, expects
that
global warming will result in more erratic fluctuations between the
extremes of
drought and excessive storms.
Even though my house was left without power by Wednesday's storm, nothing was
damaged. That changed as the second storm swept through Friday morning. As I
was paying bills on the front porch, the sky again changed from blue to grey
and rains started with little warning. I grabbed my checkbook as the
increasing
wind tried to pull it away from me. Shutting my windows, I saw that two
enormous branches had fallen from the maple tree into the garden. In a few
seconds,
months of planting, weeding and tending was gone. Beans had been growing on
one of the three fences that were torn down. Heirloom tomatoes, peppers,
chard
and carrots were under branches. My five types of basil  well, I won't be
giving too much pesto to friends this year.
My woes were small compared to those who had roofs torn off, suffered from
heat exhaustion, or were electrocuted from dangling wires. The original
estimate
of 490,000 customers losing electricity on Wednesday had been increased to
570,000 by Thursday. That day, the electric company received over 40,000
calls
per hour. After Friday's storm, the electric company estimated that 1.1
million
customers lost power at some point during the three days. On Wednesday, 55%
of St. Louis was without power. By Friday, over 75% of the nearby communities
of Florissant and Granite City had lost power. In Jennings, it was over 90%.
The unspoken phrase
Everyone agreed that it was the most damaging storm system ever to hit St.
Louis. And there was zero warning 12 hours before the first blast arrived.
The
second most destructive storm in St. Louis history saw 217,000 people without
power. That was in August, 2005.
Though the two worst storms in St. Louis history happened within the last 11
months, the phrase "global warming" did not appear in corporate media. I did
not hear it on the radio or see it in dozens of newspaper stories or TV
broadcasts.
The single explanation of the storm was that it was a "gust front" resulting
from a combination of hot, moist air from south of St. Louis and cool air
pooled in north central Illinois. No media analysis probed why it was so
intense,
unpredicted, and the second in two years. Media stories were limited to human
suffering and relief efforts.
What permeated every media story was the incredible number of downed trees.
Everywhere you looked, trees limbs were all over the streets and on cars and
houses.
Devin Ceartas is a long time activist with the Heartwood Alliance who has an
amazingly broad scientific understanding. He confirmed my suspicion that the
tendency for cities to have higher temperatures than surrounding areas is
that
they have fewer trees and more concrete, asphalt and brick that absorb heat.
But he added something important about forests. Ceartas pointed out that when
strong winds hit a forest, the edge is damaged far more than the center.
Trees act as a break on strong wind. Like a forest, a city could have
stronger
protection from high winds if it had dense growth of trees.
This suggests that global warming feeds upon itself in cities. Cities not
only suffer the increased heat that the rest of the world does, but,
accumulate
heat because of their high concrete to tree ratio. As storms down urban
trees,
the concrete to tree ratio rises even more, making the city hotter. With
fewer
shade from trees, there is more reliance on air conditioning, which spews hot
air outside as the interior of the building is cooled. The greater heat
contributes to more storms that fell more tree, increase the temperature,
and so
on.
This can be very personal. Our maple tree whose branches fell on the garden
still towers above our house and above electrical wires. To protect our home
and our electricity, we have a good reason to have the tree cut down.
Though one
maple tree would have little effect on heat and wind in St. Louis, a million
people making the choice to cut down one tree each could well impact the
urban
climate.
While one type of protection from storm damage would be to create as dense
tree coverage as possible, a couple of factors weigh against it.
Hurricane-force
winds such as St. Louis received create a powerful incentive to cut down
trees anywhere near a power line. Second, one of the casualties of the St.
Louis
storm was the large number of 50 to 100 year old trees that came down.
Politicians who are anxious to boast that "Everything's back to the way it
was!" seem
incapable of comprehending that it takes 50 to 100 years to replace a 50 to
100 year old tree.
During the week following the storm, several themes were noticeable by their
absence in the St. Louis press. Of course, the phrase "global warming" has
been more studiously avoided than during discussions following Katrina.
Similarly, there has been an exclusive focus on the danger of trees with
no mention of
their value in diminishing the effects of storms.
An interesting change occurred in the reporting of water main breaks. An
early listing of storm damages described how bursts and cracks in water
supply
pipes had been caused by electrical fluctuations after power returned to
pumping
stations. This explanation was curiously absent from reports of a massive
water main break following the second storm. On Friday evening, water
flooded the
basement of the St. Louis Science Center and forced the closure of Interstate
64. Coverage of motorboats being used to survey the damage reported it as an
unrelated story and made no effort to explore whether it could be related to
the storms.
The ultra-storm
Let's go over some of the storm-related events in St. Louis, but not as
something in the past which is over and done with. Instead, visualize them
in the
present, as what is likely to happen in cities during the more intense and
more
frequent events caused by global warming that could be called "ultra-storms."
The day the ultra-storm hits, there is no warning on radio, TV or newspaper
that would help people prepare for it.
Suddenly, winds increase to 60 Â 90 miles per hour, knocking down trees and
blowing off roofs.
Between 55% and 90% of homes lose electrical power.
Broken power lines in yards and streets ignite fires and electrocute
residents and repair workers.
Entire business districts become ghost towns, with block after block of
locked doors during the day and no lighting at night.
Temperatures of over 100 degrees with sweltering humidity push people without
power to seek relief at cooling centers or at the homes of relatives or fr
iends.
Cops, emergency workers, and a token 300 National Guardspeople go
door-to-door looking for anyone stranded in the heat.
Another storm (or 2 or 3) during the next few days starts everything up
again.
As days go by, people throw rotting food out of their refrigerators.
Power outages make gasoline and ice premium items.
Clean-up crews make streets passable but water main breaks flood other roads.
People in low income areas watch the rich get their power restored first.
Those who cannot be at home to give access to power company workers discover
that their homes do not get repaired and they prepare for weeks without
electricity.
People get a "boil order" for drinking water and then the gas gets shut off
due to line breakage. (Maybe use candles to boil water?)
Reporters show roads blocked by trees, power lines broken by trees, cars
crushed by trees, and roofs smashed by trees, leading viewers to see the
tree as
public enemy number one and the chain saw as god's greatest gift to man.
Reporters never utter the phrase "global warming," as if station editors want
to be sure that viewers see the crisis as a natural disaster and never
connect the dots to New Orleans.
Something very important for St. Louis is left out of the above list because
it may not happen in future ultra-storms. Though over 100,000 people are
still
without power a week after the first hit, the repair that has occurred is due
to electrical company employees from at least nine states coming to St.
Louis. As ultra-storms become more common, it is very likely that there
won't be
nine states able to send in repair crews because they will be doing
repairs for
their own ultra-storm.
At precisely the time that we need to be talking about fundamentally new
economic courses to stop global warming, the media is downplaying the
source of
the problem and politicians are offering frivolous lifestyle changes like
fluorescent light bulbs and hybrid cars. We need to be discussing and
adopting
dramatic new modes of home design with 90% reduction in heating and
cooling needs,
a massive decrease in automobile existence, and, most important, a reduction
in wastful energy consumption by basic industry. (i.e., Do there really
need to
be huge insurance company buildings?)
Nowhere is this more apparent than the War for Oil. The US squanders massive
energy in military production and transportation of troops across the
globe to
steal oil from Iraq so that massive amounts of fossil fuels can be fed to US
cars. Meanwhile, New Orleans is flattened by a hurricane intensified by the
heating of the Gulf of Mexico  caused largely by burning fossil fuels Â
and the
National Guard can't help because its off stealing oil to feed cars that will
increase global warming. The negative feedback loops are never ending.
Agreeing that the international plundering of oil should be the top priority
of the US, the main thing the Republicans and Democrats argue about is
whether
it should be done unilaterally by brute force or done diplomatically by
sharing the booty with more allies. The St. Louis ultra-storm is the
latest proof
that the corporate parties are unable to conceptualize, much less implement,
actions that are needed to keep this planet alive.
Don Fitz is editor of Synthesis/Regeneration: A Magazine of Green Social
Thought and producer of Green Time TV in St. Louis. He can be reached at
fitzdon at aol.com
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