Climate change isn't coming; it's already here.
A new national report lays out the many ways in which the
Hawaiian Islands are already in the grip of severe changes, from our nearshore
waters to our highest peaks.
The short version: Fresh water supplies are threatened in
multiple ways; Coastlines are eroding and rising salt water is damaging coastal
infrastructure; Fisheries are seeing lower yields; Wildlife is disappearing.
The Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume II, prepared
by the U.S. Global Change Research Program, looks at the effects of the global
climate crisis across the nation, and includes an entire section on Hawai`i and the Pacific.
Climate indicators and impacts.
From 4th NCA Vol2
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It follows up on Volume 1, the Climate Science Special
Report, which came out about this time last year. The research effort was
established by congress in the Global Change Research Act of 1990, and was
signed into law by President George H.W. Bush.
“This report makes it clear that climate change has arrived
far sooner and as a greater threat than we previously thought,” said the
East-West Center's Victoria Keener, who served as regional lead for the
Hawai`i-Pacific chapter.
The Union of Concerned Scientists said the latest version of
the report adds new information in the ways different climate impacts interact.
"There is now information available on the interconnectedness of different
sectors, and how this can lead to ripple effects," said Rachel Licker,
senior climate scientist with the organization. Examples: heat waves are linked
to power outages, drought to crop losses, warming oceans to loss of coral
reefs.
Keener emphasized the local impacts, and said immediate action
is crucial:
"We're already seeing threats in Hawai`i and the
Pacific… In the mid-2000s, Hawai`i had the worst drought on record… Here on
O‘ahu, we already see road closures during morning rush hour because of
flooding, and with sea level rise we’ll see this more and more. Our Pacific
Island neighbors on atolls will face sustainability challenges sooner rather
than later. The world’s largest insurers recently stated that climate change is
creating an ‘uninsurable’ world. Only by acting now can we hope to effectively
manage these risks,” Keener said.
The City and County of Honolulu's chief resilience officer
Josh Stanbro said one action is particularly critical: " Given the
hurricane threats and flooding we’ve already seen, everyone’s new year
resolution should be to get off of fossil fuel as fast as we possibly can—it’s
the only way to protect our safety and long-term security.”
The islands depend on fresh water, and water supplies are
threatened by droughts that reduce groundwater recharge, reduced rainfall that
shrinks streamflow, flooding during increasing storm events that spread
pollutants, saltwater intrusion along coasts that turns nearshore groundwater
brackish and much more.
Zena Grecni, a Yale-educated climate assessment specialist
with NOAA at the East-West Center, said "the leadership at the state and
county level is critical."
Both Grecni and Keener cited the city Board of Water Supply
for its aggressive efforts to protect Honolulu water supplies from the impacts
of climate change. Keener said community groups in various places on the
Islands are also leaders in addressing climate change.
In a public statement on the climate report, the East-West
Center listed some of its key findings:
•Dependable
and safe water supplies are threatened by rising temperatures, changing
rainfall patterns, sea level rise, and increased risk of extreme drought and
flooding. Islands are already experiencing saltwater contamination due to sea
level rise, which is expected to catastrophically impact food and water
security, especially on low-lying atolls.
• Sea
level rise has accelerated and is now damaging critical infrastructure such as
transportation and housing, as well as beaches, ecosystems and cultural sites.
In Hawai‘i, the value of all structures and land expected to be flooded by 2100
amounts to more than $19 billion statewide. The Pacific Islands will experience
sea level rise higher than the global average, projected to further accelerate
strongly after mid-century. Adaptation strategies that are implemented sooner
can better prepare communities and infrastructure.
•Increasing
ocean temperatures and acidification threaten fisheries, coral reefs, and the
livelihoods they support. Widespread coral reef bleaching and death are
occurring more frequently, and by mid-century these events are projected to
occur annually, especially if current trends in greenhouse gas emissions
continue. Bleaching and acidification will result in loss of reefs, leading to
lower fisheries yields and loss of coastal protection and habitat.
•These
changes imperil Indigenous peoples’ health and well-being and their
relationships with lands, territories, and cultural resources.
•Climate
change reduces the ability of habitats to support protected plant and animal
species. Changes promote the spread of invasive species, threatening
biodiversity, important to island people and a source of economic revenue. Some
species are expected to become extinct and others to decline to the point of
requiring costly protection.
“This Assessment puts out a red alert to island communities
like Oʻahu and shows just how vulnerable we are at a local level to climate
change,” Stanbro said.
©Jan TenBruggencate 2018
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