A field of olive groves being plowed in Ruvo di Puglia, Italy NurPhoto/Getty Images
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The European Environment Agency this week released a meticulous 300-page report on climate risks facing the EU, and it
can be summed up thus: Without immediate and significant action, Southern Europe is screwed. There are other takeaways from the report, for sure, about climate threats throughout Europe. But in each of the five main risk categories the report evaluates—ecosystems, food, health, infrastructure, and economy and finance—Southern Europe is going to be hit the hardest. Over the coming decades, the region will lose "biodiversity/carbon sinks due to wildfires," the flames and smoke of which will
also affect human health. Southern Europe will see crops fail at higher rates than in areas farther north. It will experience "energy disruption due to heat and drought." Its economy will suffer "due to water scarcity," and its public finances will struggle due to large debt-to-gross domestic product ratios. And action is urgently needed because Southern Europe is already seeing dramatic damage from climate change. In agriculture, all of Europe is going to see big shifts, such as reductions of up to 10–25 percent in corn and wheat yields; without policy intervention, the agricultural economic losses in the EU and the U.K. alone could top 65 billion euros (just over $71 billion) per year, per one study cited by the report. But Southern Europe is already seeing reductions that exceed those figures, "with wheat and maize yield reductions of over 60% in some … regions." The report envisions risk to the European region in general as "substantial" in the current term, near term, and mid term, only rising to "critical" in the 2080s … except for Southern Europe, where the risk is rated as "critical" now, rising to "catastrophic" by the 2080s.
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Climate change is already affecting precipitation patterns across the globe. In the United States, it’s predicted that parts of the East Coast will see larger numbers of torrential downpours in the coming decades while parts of the West suffer from extreme drought. And in Europe, the new report says, there may be a similar pattern, with Northern Europe prone to periodic flooding. Yet even here, Southern Europe is in a tougher spot. For while "northern and central Europe experience both beneficial and adverse impacts on water-dependent energy systems … southern
Europe faces predominantly adverse impacts as availability of water to support hydropower production or cooling [e.g., for nuclear power plants] is less reliable." And access to fresh water for drinking and irrigation will face other threats, not limited to drought: Rising seas mean "saltwater intrusion is also affecting water supplies in many coastal regions in Southern Europe." The devastating list of predictions goes on. Wildfires will reduce air quality particularly in Southern Europe, which is "expected to increase respiratory illnesses, morbidity and mortality." Heat waves in Southern Europe will reach "catastrophic" levels by the 2040s, but are already dangerous for the outdoor workforce. Nor can tourism save the day. Thanks to wildfires and heat waves in the summer, "projections of future tourism demand show a clear pattern, with northern regions benefiting from milder conditions while southern regions face significant reductions in tourism demand, especially in a high-emission scenario." Meanwhile, "European beaches may experience reduced amenity due to sea level rise amplifying coastal erosion and inundation risks, particularly in southern Europe." The report also states that while there are "substantial current/near-term risks" for public finances at present, these risks are closer to "critical" for countries with high debt-to-GDP ratios. Those too are concentrated in Southern Europe. The highest debt-to-GDP ratios are in Greece and Italy, with Portugal, France, and Spain exchanging third, fourth, and fifth rankings over the past few years. The report isn’t solely doom and gloom. One of the reassuring parts is just how many policy interventions have been identified that could make things better. If you’re looking for climate "solutions"—specifically, evidence that societies have tools for addressing the amount of warming that’s already locked in—this report is full of them. Take the water topic, where the report proposes reusing wastewater; investing in desalination infrastructure, sand dams, and other techniques for water harvesting; "creating or improving early warning and alert systems"; switching to "more drought-resistant crops"; building water-retaining soil on farms; and restoring rivers and wetlands to "increase water retention in river catchments." That represents just a tiny fraction of the report’s proposals. Reducing emissions to keep climate change from spiraling out of control isn’t the focus of this report. But the urgent need to limit climate change, rather than just adapt to it, haunts the document. Lots of places in the world, and even in the U.S., are going to be in a position similar to Southern Europe. Quite a few places are in even worse shape. At this point, it’s hard to think of a regional climate risk assessment that wouldn’t have lessons for the entire globe.
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—Heather Souvaine Horn, deputy editor
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This Washington Post piece on the potential health effects—particularly for kids—of playing sports on artificial turf is careful and balanced. But I
wouldn’t exactly call it reassuring.
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"For every dollar the government has contributed" to the energy transition via the Inflation Reduction Act, Grist’s Syris Valentine reports, "the private sector has kicked in $5.47, leading to nearly a quarter-trillion dollars flowing into the clean economy in just one year." Those numbers come from a new analysis by the Rhodium Group, and are likely to be interpreted as a success story. But given abundant evidence that the energy transition still isn’t happening fast enough, Valentine points out, perhaps they should be treated more like proof of concept.
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Texas’s devastating, record-breaking Smokehouse Creek fire, which began in late February and killed two people while burning over a million acres, seems to have been started by a poorly maintained utility power pole, which fell and sparked the blaze. Such aging electrical infrastructure is an increasing problem all over the United States, reports Julia Simon for NPR. But it’s not getting fixed. Even the small improvements that could make things safer aren’t being made:
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There are some basic—and relatively cheap—things that utilities with even a small wildfire risk should be employing, [Michael Wara, director of the Climate and Energy Policy Program at the Woods Institute,] says. Things like weather sensors on power poles. They can give power companies a much clearer sense of dangerous conditions like strong winds or dry, hot weather. "It’s not expensive, right? It’s those little weather stations you’d buy and maybe put on your house if you were a weather nerd," Wara says. Also utilities can change settings to automatically turn power lines off when conditions are unsafe, he says. "The utilities have the tools. This is not a mystery," Wara says. Part of the problem may be that many utility companies aren’t always incentivized to make the fixes and operational changes that are key to reduce wildfire risk, says David Pomerantz of the Energy and Policy Institute, a utility watchdog. Instead he says many power companies are biased towards building expensive things which can guarantee a profit.
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