|
Watching for Local Signs of Climate
Change:
by
Frank J.
Regan (December 24, 2007)
This is
probably a non-story for
environmental news, but something
I’m going to be watching over the
years. One of the many predictions
about how Global Warming will affect
the Northeast is a change in some
flora of our area, which will affect
some business, and the production of
maple syrup may be one of those. (Maple
syrup shortage taps wallets
- Prices are up after poor spring
weather kept production down— If
you'll be giving or serving New York
maple syrup this holiday season, you
probably paid more for it this year.
A combination of consumer demand and
a supply shortage have boosted
prices 10 percent to 20 percent at
many area retailers. (December 24,
2007)
Democrat & Chronicle)
I’m hesitant to post this remark,
because many view environmentalists
as ‘alarmists,’ which of course we
are—and must be. One of the most
important roles for
environmentalists, I believe, is to
use their reason, education,
observations, interactions with
others and the environment, to
foresee possible positive and
negative trends in our environment.
Sadly, it has evolved that it is
the trend of business to set the bar
of environmental concern very high
(in some cases absolute scientific
proof) before determining whether or
not something constitutes a danger.
The problem is that with
environmental degradation, long
before something can be proven to
the satisfaction of all, that bar
will make it impossible to solve
environmental problems, as many are
irreversible.
On this note, I’m
reading an interesting book “A
Green History of the World: The
Environment and the Collapse of
Great Civilizations” by Clive
Ponting. I suggest all read it
because it provide a long sweeping
view of history in terms of how
mankind has affected our environment
and in many cased doomed their
civilization. I cannot help if this
seems depressing to some, but hiding
ones head in sand in these
extraordinary times is the mark of a
species heading for extinction.
A
nyway, there are a host of
possible ramification of Global
Warming for our area that a prudent
species should keep their eyes on:
temperatures rising, a migration of
plants and animals north as our
climate adopts a Southern visage
(though, most ((especially plants))
won’t move quickly enough),
droughts, change in precipitation,
lowering of Great Lakes water
levels, coastal flooding, sea-level
rise, shore-line change, extreme
heat in our cities, more diseases
(like Lyme disease, West Nile Virus,
and maybe malaria) and more potent
cases of poison ivy, air quality
loss, agriculture changes, changes
in the fisheries, changes in the
dairy industry, changes in
spruce/fir forest of the
Adirondacks, alterations in winter
recreation (did you know the NYS has
“more ski areas than any other state
in the nation”?), and an increase in
ozone pollution."
***You can respond
to this essay on
Environmental Thoughts
* Back
to Essays
|