Looking on the Brighter Side, Perversely

authordefault
on

Here’s an Akron Beacon Journal, story on the implications of climate change for the Great Lakes. The bad news: Lake Erie is expected to shrink by one-sixth over the course of the next 64 years. The good news: what’sย left will be a โ€œnaturalโ€ coastline, unblemished by humanย obstructions.

This, unfortunately, is an example ofย whyย U.S. and Canadian industry get so crazy about the Environmental Protection Agency and Environment Canada, two of the agencies thatย participated in this lake-waterย review.ย 

โ€œWe can try to be positive about climate change, really positive,โ€ said Jeff Tyson, a senior fisheries biologist at the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, another contributor toย the management plan. โ€œIf it continues to be hot, once you lose that meter of water over the top, we get an entirely natural, new shoreline along a lot of the lakefront. If we manage it right, things could look a lot like they did when the first white settlersย arrived.โ€

The problem, of course, is that some of those dastardly man-made obstructions include shipping ports, docks, water treatment plants โ€“ all manner of quite helpfulย infrastructure.

On one hand, Tyson is correct: we are going to have to adapt to some effects of climate change that are now inevitable. On the other, it seems prudent to continue to wave the flag of caution โ€“ to avoid as much of this dislocation as possible โ€“ rather than painting an unrealistic vision of pre-contact virgin nature. What’s left when the water recedesย is more likely to resemble the dried, crack banks of Salt Lake than a lush example of prairie, beach and ancientย forest.

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

Analysis
on

The American refiner pitched a pivot away from Alberta suppliers ahead of President Trumpโ€™s trade war salvo.

The American refiner pitched a pivot away from Alberta suppliers ahead of President Trumpโ€™s trade war salvo.
Opinion
on

The first step is to listen and acknowledge that people of all political stripes are feeling confused, overwhelmed, angry, and scared.

The first step is to listen and acknowledge that people of all political stripes are feeling confused, overwhelmed, angry, and scared.
on

Companies and states most responsible for climate change are also those working hardest to prevent climate action, new Carbon Majors report finds.

Companies and states most responsible for climate change are also those working hardest to prevent climate action, new Carbon Majors report finds.
on

Conservative conference featured global right-wing speakers from Liz Truss to JD Vance calling for an end to climate protections.

Conservative conference featured global right-wing speakers from Liz Truss to JD Vance calling for an end to climate protections.