EARTH ACTION IN THE NEWS - September 24, 2020

6 views
Skip to first unread message

Emerald

unread,
Sep 24, 2020, 4:28:25 AM9/24/20
to Earth Action Campaign
Occupy Sonoma County

EARTH ACTION IN THE NEWS  

Welcome to the people who have joined recently.  This is a simple weekly newsletter.  Your participation is encouraged.  Please share information and actions about climate change, climate justice, GMOs, toxic chemicals, and Earth-related topics.
If you wish to reduce email volume switch your membership to the digest or abridged version.
Please refrain from posting petitions or donation requests without OSC approval.  Thank you for joining us.


Go to our Facebook and Twitter pages to share these articles already posted there. 
If you are uncomfortable clicking on links in an email you can cut and paste the link into your browser.


BREAKTHROUGH!
CA Governor Newsom’s Executive Order on Climate Is Missing Action on Oil
Gavin Newsom has banned the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035 and demands immediate action to phase out the state’s oil extraction and production to address the climate crisis.

Virginia jumps to head of the class on school solar installations, report shows

BP drops a cluster bomb on Big Oil

Global Wave Discovery Ends 220-Year Search
"An 18th-century physicist first predicted the existence of a chorus of atmospheric waves that swoop around Earth. Scientists have finally found them."

Moon vows to shut down 30 more coal plants to bring cleaner air and battle climate change
"South Korea will shut down 30 additional coal power plants by 2034 in line with the country’s ambition to cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote eco-friendly energy sources, President Moon Jae-in announced Monday."

LOCAL REPORTS
Colonization Made California a Tinderbox: Why Indigenous Land Stewardship Would Help Combat Climate Fires (video)

Wildfires Make Dangerous Air For Farmworkers: 'It's Like You Can't Breathe'

“These Are Climate Fires”: Oregon Firefighter Ecologist Says Devastating Blazes Are a Wake-Up Call (video)

SMART quietly marks 3 years of service, faces ‘clouded picture’ following tax defeat and pandemic

How Will West Coast Wildfires Impact the U.S. Economy?

Smoke From West Coast Wildfires Reaches East Coast, Europe

Feinstein’s misguided bill
Yes, That’s Smoke From West Coast Fires Above D.C.

The climate refugees are here. They're Americans.

Washington Gov. Inslee says state looks ‘apocalyptic’ from fires
“We have a blowtorch over our states in the West, which is climate change,” he said."

Five solutions to California’s climate crisis Gov. Newsom should implement … right now
"Unless we stop burning fossil fuels, transition to renewable energy and give nature a chance to heal, our world is going to get much hotter and more dangerous, with each “new normal” worse than the one before. We have too much to fight for to let that happen. We can and must do more to create a better world for our children, and there’s no better time to start than right now."

In a Historic Wildfire Season, It’s Time to Follow the Lead of Young Campaigners

FOSSIL FUELS
10 reasons why handing public money to gas companies is a terrible idea

'Unplanned Gas Release' at Controversial Gas Facility in Weymouth, South of Boston

PLASTIC & POLLUTION
New Report Reveals How Plastic Polluters Have Avoided Regulation Worldwide for Decades

WAKE UP CALL
New Report Documents How Climate Migration Could Reshape U.S.
"Several factors are driving changes in the suitability of different environments, researchers note. These include extreme heat and humidity—the collision of which will create what scientists call "wet bulb" temperatures that will "disrupt the norms of daily existence"—as well as larger and more frequent wildfires, rising sea levels, declining crop yields, and economic damages related to higher energy costs and lower labor productivity."

What Is Climate Gentrification?
"While it is good that cities adopt green interventions to increase climate resilience, the greening can lead to gentrification and displacement, given our racially and structurally unjust planning practices and policies, which don't focus enough on keeping people in place if they so choose, especially renters."

Blue Jean Fibers Found Polluting Arctic Ocean, Great Lakes
"It's not an indictment of jeans — I want to be really clear that we're not coming down on jeans," study coauthor and University of Toronto environmental scientist Miriam Diamond told WIRED. "It's just a really potent example of human impact."

Warmth shatters section of Greenland ice shelf

One in eight deaths in Europe linked to pollution, environment, EU says

World Failed to Meet a Single Goal to Save Nature: UN Biodiversity Report

Fashion Killer: Report Finds that the Apparel Industry is a Major Contributor to Biodiversity Loss

THINK TANK & STRATEGY

The Power of Inclusive, Intergenerational Climate Activism
“There’s a lot of knowledge built up in experience, and there’s a lot of energy that’s stored in young people... When you put those two together, you have an excellent recipe for potential success.”

Decolonizing Environmentalism
"As climate change becomes a mainstream concern, Indigenous knowledge can reveal truths not visible with White, Eurocentric approaches to conservation. Traditional ecological knowledge is central to monitoring and combating climatic change."

Why Do Americans Give Away So Much Control to Corporations?
By Ralph Nader

New Zealand minister calls for finance sector to disclose climate crisis risks in world first

DIRECT ACTIONS
The Environmental Legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg
"As we mourn the loss of Justice Ginsburg, we should reflect on her words that 'Real change, enduring change, happens one step at a time.' Those of us who strive to make change for good in this world — whether it be fighting for racial justice, reproductive rights, or for a livable future — must continue the fight in her honor." ~ Michael Brune, Sierra Club

New Fossil Fuel Projects Meet Indigenous Resistance in New Mexico

Extinction Rebellion is showing Britain what real democracy could look likehttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/sep/16/extinction-rebellion-britain-democracy-protest-westminster

Portuguese Youth Activists Sue 33 Countries Over Climate Crisis


SUSTAINABLE LIVING
What’s in a Social Justice Diet?
"Tying together food and climate justice isn’t an intellectual exercise... Justice work, in any form, is about creating and sustaining relationships with one another, including the relationships with the Earth and our food systems. We have to do the hard work of moving from a transactional, colonial, and capitalist model of feeding ourselves to a relational model of feeding and caring for each other."
The OSC Shopper's Guide will help you to make these good choices.

UN: 'Climate-Smart' Cities Are the Future – Here Are Three Examples

ENDING ON A POSITIVE
15 Organizations and Initiatives Helping to Save the Bees

A Crop of Kitchen Gardens From Chefs Around the Globe
This is a lovely slideshow that you will enjoy.

Call To Action! 
We urge all groups including schools, neighborhood associations, organizations, clubs and groups of any kind to adopt a Climate Declaration.  Adopt ours or write your own.  Share your Climate Declaration with local governments, the media, write articles, and share information. 
Occupy Sonoma County Climate Declaration

Occupy Sonoma County, along with concerned, forward thinking people all over the world, declares that climate change has reached catastrophic proportions as evidenced by the current level of CO2 in the atmosphere, the melting of polar ice caps, and the continual rising of global temperatures.  This is a global emergency, and we must act immediately.  We invite all forces of life to join together for our survival.  We stand up for life.

We recognize that the root of climate change is a capitalist system run by money greedy corporations and the governments that they control.  We actively oppose greenhouse gas producers, nuclear power investors, and fossil fuel companies by boycotting their products, developing alternatives, divesting from corporations that endorse them and insisting that governments at all levels take action.  We call on all governments and corporations to adopt life-sustaining practices immediately.

The people must act now to stop this destruction from continuing and reverse the damage this has caused.  The future is in our hands.  We are the 99%!

What Earth Actions are you taking?


707-877-6650
http://OccupySonomaCounty.org
http://OccupySonomaCounty.org/es
  (
en español)
http://www.facebook.com/OccupySonomaCounty

https://twitter.com/OcSoCo

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmJoCP-ePUTPWNgHZwtBelg


Occupy Sonoma County embraces the egalitarian, deep democracy principles of the Occupy Movement with a regional strategy for effectively organizing countywide social justice campaigns that are globally relevant.

creek shade

unread,
Sep 24, 2020, 11:05:15 AM9/24/20
to Emerald, Earth Action Campaign
Emerald, 

Thank you so much for the weekly update.
I have a new one to add from Jack Cohen and co-author, Dave Strohmaier. Jack has done the classic home safety studies; our 100-foot defensible space law is essentially based on his studies — he started publishing around 2000.  He was a career USFS (forest service) fire scientist and has now retired. You can see wild home safety videos if you look him up. Here is their article, below.
Best wishes, 
Maya


https://wildfiretoday.com/2020/09/21/community-destruction-during-extreme-wildfires-is-a-home-ignition-problem/

Community destruction during extreme wildfires is a home ignition problem

By Jack Cohen and Dave Strohmaier

We must abandon our expectation that we can suppress 100% of wildfires and reject the false narrative that community protection requires wildfire control. Community wildfire disasters have only occurred during extreme conditions when high wind speed, low relative humidity, and flammable vegetation result in high fire intensities, rapid fire growth rates, and showers of burning embers (firebrands) starting new fires. Fire agencies primarily use wildfire suppression tactics for protecting communities from wildfires. But as we see from current extreme wildfire conditions in California, Oregon, and Washington, fire suppression can quickly become overwhelmed and ineffective.

Wildfires, and thus extreme wildfires, are inevitable. Does that mean wildland-urban (WU) fire disasters are inevitable as well? Absolutely not! WU fire research has shown that homeowners can create ignition resistant homes to prevent community wildfire disasters. How can that be possible?

Recall the destruction in Paradise, CA, during the extreme 2018 Camp Fire. Most of the totally destroyed homes in Paradise were surrounded by unconsumed tree canopies. Although many journalists and public officials believe this outcome was unusual, the pattern of unconsumed vegetation adjacent to and surrounding total home destruction is typical of WU fire disasters. In 2020 we see the same patterns of home destruction and adjacent unconsumed vegetation in photos from Malden, WA, and Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, and Mill City OR. Home destruction with adjacent unconsumed shrub and tree vegetation indicates the following:

  • High intensity wildfire does not continuously spread through a residential area as a tsunami or flood of flame.
  • Unconsumed shrub and tree canopies adjacent to homes do not produce high intensity flames that ignite the homes; ignitions can only be from burning embers and low intensity surface fires.
  • The “big flames” of high intensity wildfires are not causing total home destruction.

Surprisingly, research has shown that home ignitions during extreme wildfires result from conditions local to a home. A home’s ignition vulnerabilities in relation to nearby burning materials within 100 feet principally determine home ignitions. This area of a home and its immediate surroundings is called the home ignition zone (HIZ). Typically, lofted burning embers initiate ignitions within the HIZ – to homes directly and nearby flammables leading to homes. Although an intense wildfire can loft firebrands more than one-half mile to start fires, the minuscule local conditions where the burning embers land and accumulate determine ignitions. Importantly, most home destruction during extreme wildfires occurs hours after the wildfire has ceased intense burning near the community; the residential fuels – homes, other structures, and vegetation – continue fire spread within the community.

Uncontrollable extreme wildfires are inevitable; however, by reducing home ignition potential within the HIZ we can create ignition resistant homes and communities. Thus, community wildfire risk should be defined as a home ignition problem, not a wildfire control problem. Unfortunately, protecting communities from wildfire by reducing home ignition potential runs counter to established orthodoxy.

There are good reasons to do “fuel treatments” for ecological and commercial objectives. But the greatest fuel treatment effect on wildfire behavior is within the fuel treatment area; fuel treatments do notstop extreme wildfires. So let’s call a spade a spade and not pretend that many, or even most fuel treatment projects actually reduce home ignition potential during extreme wildfires. Because local conditions determine home ignitions, the most effective “fuel treatment” addressing community wildfire risk reduces home ignition potential within HIZs and the community. Wildfires, exacerbated by climate change, will occur. Community destruction during extreme wildfires will continue as long as wildfire suppression remains the primary approach for community protection. Conducting the same ineffective strategy and tactics expecting different results will continue to be a recipe for disaster when it comes to protecting homes from extreme wildfire.

To make this shift, land managers, elected officials, and members of the public must question some of our most deeply ingrained assumptions regarding fire. For the sake of fiscal responsibility, scientific integrity, and effective outcomes, it’s high time we abandon the tired and disingenuous policies of our century-old all-out war on wildfire and fuel treatments conducted under the guise of protecting communities. Instead, let’s focus on mitigating WU fire risk where ignitions are determined – within the home ignition zone.


Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
                                    - Margaret Mead

Sent from Maya's iPhone
--
www.OccupySonomaCounty.org
 
To select the daily digest or abridged version go to your membership settings.
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OSC - Earth Action Campaign" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to osc_earth-acti...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/osc_earth-action/CAKZZ0TdztdrRjr-B9TRcfbiX4AJAdP6P-wy--QjNufT70u1ypQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Jorge Rebagliati

unread,
Sep 25, 2020, 10:06:45 PM9/25/20
to Emerald, creek shade, Earth Action Campaign, SoCoCAN!
Hi:

Thank you Maya for supporting the concept of fire-hardening.  I have offered it to these groups in the past with no obvious results.

Here are again a few important links to give all of you a perspective of how to achieve fire-hardening and how successful it can be.

We have been fire-hardening our home.  I am enclosing a couple of photos of the steel fence and steel gates.  We also have gotten P V panels and battery.  To get 100% protection from embers getting inside the building through the vents, I recommend Embers Out.

May you all feel inspired to protect your home and you neighborhood.  It is very worth doing it.

Best,

Jorge  

Climate Change Emergency Declaration Campaign


P1000877.jpeg
P1000885.jpeg

creek shade

unread,
Sep 29, 2020, 2:03:51 PM9/29/20
to Jorge Rebagliati, Emerald, Earth Action Campaign, SoCoCAN!
Hi Jorge and All,

Thanks so much for sending the fire safety links, Jorge. If anyone would like extra pubs on fire safety, I can send additional work by J. Cohen and his colleagues - especially Alex Syphard, she is brilliant.

Here’s an update from LA TIMES today - below. It’s a strong piece about the correlation between logging projects and fire severity. It refers to a comprehensive pub that came out in 2016 — exploring areas with the high severity fires. Let me know if you’d like to see that one.

Best regards,
Maya 

https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-09-29/logging-wildfires-prevent-destruction 

Op-Ed: Don’t believe self-serving messengers. Logging will not prevent destructive wildfires

By Chad Hanson
Sep. 29, 2020


My community of Big Bear City, in the mountains east of Los Angeles, had a tense week recently. For a few nerve-racking days, the El Dorado fire, which has burned more than 20,000 acres in and around the San Bernardino National Forest, threatened to move our way.

The fire had seen little movement in the previous days, despite the fact that it was burning in dense forests with many dead trees and downed logs. Weather conditions had been cool and calm. Then things changed, and quickly. The weather shifted to hot, dry and windy. Right away, the El Dorado fire began spreading much more rapidly, toward Big Bear. We were notified to prepare for potential evacuation. Several days later, temperatures cooled again, winds died down and fire activity calmed.

Scenarios like this are playing out across the western United States, especially in California and Oregon. Many homes have been lost and, tragically, at least 30 lives too. Numerous communities have been forced to evacuate, displacing thousands of families. People are scared and looking for answers.

Meanwhile, as wildfires continue in parts of the West that don’t often burn, a troubling new form of climate change denial has crept into the public dialogue, and it is only increasing the threats to public safety.

The logging industry — and the Republican and Democratic politicians whose reelection campaigns it finances — are busy telling the press and the public that they should focus on “forest management” in remote wildlands, rather than on climate change and community wildfire preparedness. Joining this chorus is a group of agency and university scientists funded by the Trump administration.

Logging bills are now being promoted in Congress, ostensibly as solutions. Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Steve Daines (R-Mont.) introduced a bill last month that would severely erode environmental laws to increase commercial logging in our national forests. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) has introduced a bill that would triple funding to subsidize logging on federal forestlands.

My colleagues and I conducted an ambitious scientific study on wildfire behavior and trends — one of the largest ever to analyze the factors that drive such fires. The study involved three decades of data and tens of millions of acres of forest fires across the American West.

What we found will not surprise most people who have an understanding of climate change. Weather and climate influence fire behavior much more than other factors. Alarmingly, in forests where trees had been removed by logging, fires burned hotter and faster. That’s because removing trees reduces shade; creates hotter, drier and windier conditions; and causes highly combustible invasive grasses to spread.

Numerous other scientists — those who are not funded by logging corporations or the Trump administration — have found the same thing. Weather and climate factors are what mainly drive wildfire behavior. Fires do not tend to burn more intensely in dense forests, or in forests with high numbers of dead trees.

Our large wildfires are driven in significant part by the climate crisis. We should respond by protecting vulnerable communities, not by allowing more logging in backcountry public forests, which does not stop fires and often makes them burn faster toward towns, as we saw tragicallywith the Camp fire in Northern California.

This year’s wildfire season has brought the biggest and fastest runs we have seen. The Creek fire and the Bear fire, in the Sierra Nevada, traveled most rapidly through areas where extensive commercial logging had already occurred, often under the deceptive guise of “fuel reduction.”

More than 200 of the top climate, forest and fire scientists in the country recently warned Congress that logging not only increases wildfire intensity and spread, but also emits more carbon into our atmosphere annually than our economy’s residential and commercial sectors combined. The scientists, myself included, urged policymakers to increase protection of forests from logging.

The only effective way to protect homes and lives from wildfires is to direct more resources toward creating fire-safe communities, improving warning systems and providing adequate evacuation assistance. Passing the Wildfire Defense Act, introduced last year by Sen.Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), would be a step in the right direction.

The climate crisis is going to loom larger every year, threatening more lives and communities. This is no time to be misled by the self-serving claims of timber companies or the politicians and scientists whose funding is tied to them. Our priority should be public safety, not profits for the logging industry.

Chad Hanson is a research ecologist with the John Muir Project. He is a co-editor and co-author of “The Ecological Importance of Mixed-Severity Fires: Nature’s Phoenix” and the author of “Smokescreen.”




Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
                                    - Margaret Mead

Sent from Maya's iPhone
<P1000877.jpeg>
<P1000885.jpeg>

creek shade

unread,
Sep 29, 2020, 10:39:13 PM9/29/20
to Jorge Rebagliati, Emerald, Earth Action Campaign, SoCoCAN!
I just received a new update on home safety from Rick Halsey, CA chaparral Institute. He is saying there are some decent prices on exterior sprinkler systems.
The update is below.
Best wishes, stay safe,
Maya

Friends,

We just updated our From the House Outward wildfire safety document that includes and incredibly reasonable exterior sprinkler design that you can purchase for less than $200.

There is a terrific video of the system in action on our webpage here:

Feel free to pass it around. Attached. It can also be downloaded from the link above.

Rick



California Chaparral Institute

Jorge Rebagliati

unread,
Oct 1, 2020, 8:15:45 PM10/1/20
to creek shade, Emerald, Earth Action Campaign, SoCoCAN!

creek shade

unread,
Oct 2, 2020, 10:11:53 AM10/2/20
to Jorge Rebagliati, Emerald, Earth Action Campaign, SoCoCAN!
Excellent, thanks Jorge!
Interesting that rooftop sprinklers for home safety are not more commonplace by now.
I heard the County is requiring internal sprinklers for new homes - which do nothing for protection on the outside.
Maya
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages