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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
California farms, vineyards in peril from warming
2009-02-04
'We're looking at a scenario where there's no more agriculture in California,' Steven Chu says. He sees education as a means to combat threat.

Reporting from Washington -- California's farms and vineyards could vanish by the end of the century, and its major cities could be in jeopardy, if Americans do not act to slow the advance of global warming, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu said Tuesday.

In his first interview since taking office last month, the Nobel-prize-winning physicist offered some of the starkest comments yet on how seriously President Obama's cabinet views the threat of climate change, along with a detailed assessment of the administration's plans to combat it.

Chu warned of water shortages plaguing the West and Upper Midwest and particularly dire consequences for California, his home state, the nation's leading agricultural producer.

In a worst case, Chu said, up to 90% of the Sierra snowpack could disappear, all but eliminating a natural storage system for water vital to agriculture.

"I don't think the American public has gripped in its gut what could happen," he said. "We're looking at a scenario where there's no more agriculture in California." And, he added, "I don't actually see how they can keep their cities going" either.

A pair of recent studies raise similar warnings. One, published in January in the journal Science, raised the specter of worldwide crop shortages as temperatures rise. Another, penned by UC Berkeley researchers last year, estimated California has about $2.5 trillion in real estate assets -- including agriculture -- endangered by warming.

Chu is not a climate scientist. He won his Nobel for work trapping atoms with laser light. He taught at Stanford University and directed the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he reoriented researchers to pursue "clean energy" technologies to help reduce the use of greenhouse-gas-emitting fossil fuels in the U.S., before Obama tapped him to head the Energy Department.

He stressed the threat of climate change in his Senate confirmation hearings and in a video clip posted on Obama's transition website, but not as bluntly, nor in as dire terms, as he did Tuesday.

In the course of a half-hour interview, Chu made clear that he sees public education as a key part of the administration's strategy to fight global warming -- along with billions of dollars for alternative energy research and infrastructure, a national standard for electricity from renewable sources and cap-and-trade legislation to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

He said the threat of warming is keeping policymakers focused on alternatives to fossil fuel, even though gasoline prices have fallen over the last six months from historic highs. But he said public awareness needs to catch up. He compared the situation to a family buying an old house and being told by an inspector that it must pay a hefty sum to rewire it or risk an electrical fire that could burn everything down.

"I'm hoping that the American people will wake up," Chu said, and pay the cost of rewiring.

Environmentalists welcomed the comments as a sharp break from the Bush administration, which often minimized research about global warming.

"To say the least, it's a breath of fresh air," said Bernadette Del Chiaro, who directs the clean air and global warming program for Environment California. "We've been worried about the impacts of global warming for years, even decades. He's absolutely right -- California stands to lose so much in our way of life."

Global warming skeptics were not swayed. "I am hopeful Secretary Chu will take note of the real-world data, new studies and the growing chorus of international scientists that question his climate claims," Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), the top Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee, said in a statement. "Computer model predictions of the year 2100 are simply not evidence of a looming climate catastrophe."
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#20  Water is a real issue and Anonymoose grasps the answer. There is a whole lot of water just over my shoulder...just get the salt out of it.
Posted by: remoteman   2009-02-04 21:07  

#19  I tried Caliwine once.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2009-02-04 20:55  

#18  and a massive, general insensitivity to what I want.

.5MT wins the thread, I think.
Posted by: trailing wife    2009-02-04 16:25  

#17  We can't grow Oranges in Orange Park Florida anymore either. I'ma thinking of a law suit, a big Mother of one. Also no Mandarins grown in Mandarin, same reason, too damn cold, has been since about 1914... bastids, I blame big oil, big tobacco, low gravity and a massive, general insensitivity to what I want.
Posted by: .5MT   2009-02-04 15:19  

#16  It starts at the top 9mm, it starts at the very top.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-02-04 15:13  

#15  'We're looking at a scenario where there's no more agriculture in California,'

I can't believe this retard is Secretary of Energy. Obama's cabinet pics just get worse and worse.
Posted by: Parabellum   2009-02-04 15:12  

#14  Suburban sprawl exacerbates water problems. For example, a few years back San Diego County damn near went to war against neighboring Imperial County, a major agricultural center, over access to Colorado River water. The reason for the dispute was rampant, virtually uncontrolled suburban sprawl in San Diego County creating an ever growing demand for more and more water. San Diego County is an arid climate that averages 10 inches of rain a year. The past several years we have received far less than the average. But don't bother asking the pols about the drought when they're approving massive new housing tracts because they plug their ears with the dollars they get from developers. An agreement was finally worked out between San Diego and Imperial Counties. But now the mayor of San Diego is telling us that mandatory water rationing is a real possibility this summer. Meanwhile, San Diego County's avocado growers, long a staple of local agriculture, have begun cutting their trees because they can't afford to water them. The trees might grow back if we ever get some rain or the growers might just sell out to developers. We've had droughts before but competition between farmers and suburbs for access to water has never been so intense. We don't need global warming...we're losing our farms without it. But I think the vineyards will be OK. We can do without fruit and vegetables but we gotta have wine.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2009-02-04 15:07  

#13  This is the government's cover to feed California government bailout money.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-02-04 14:59  

#12  That's why, that's why, yes that's why....

Me and Mighty Little be a moving, moving to Montanna soon.
Posted by: .5MT   2009-02-04 14:58  

#11  He sees $$education$$ as a means to combat threat.

Throw money at it. That always works.
Posted by: Mullah Richard   2009-02-04 14:54  

#10  Science to the rescue. There is a new type of low maintenance nanotube water filter that uses only 1/4th of the energy of reverse osmosis. It is also scalable. Then all they have to do is pump seawater converted to freshwater, ashore.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2009-02-04 13:33  

#9  California agriculture wastes a tremendous amount of water whose cost is subsidized by taxpayers across the nation. What reason is there to grow rice in a arid/semiarid climate except that water is almost free?
Posted by: ed   2009-02-04 13:23  

#8  I'll also take this guy seriously when he starts warning about the certain risk to the US when the New Madrid fault lets loose again and destroys all the nuke plants in the mid west and south. And don't forget the Yellowstone caldera that's bound to bust open and cover the eastern US in feet of volcanic ash. What's he doing about hose certainties?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2009-02-04 13:17  

#7  Chu is not a climate scientist. He won his Nobel for work trapping atoms with laser light.

But he's "wicked schmart" as we say up here...
Posted by: tu3031   2009-02-04 13:16  

#6  We can always resurrect plans to redirect the Peace river from Alaska, resulting is a net generation of green renewable hydro-power and an immense supply of fresh water.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2009-02-04 13:13  

#5  The only thing threatening Kaliphornia's farms is suburban sprawl.

There is in fact a serious water problem in CA. It's made worse by various environmental controls, but it exists.

CA's central valley provides a good portion of our fresh fruits, vegetables and livestock. Petaluma is the center of a major poultry producing area. If in fact agriculture crashes there we will indeed feel the impact in our budgets and in grocery store offerings.
Posted by: lotp   2009-02-04 13:11  

#4  "I'm hoping that the American people will wake up," Chu said, and pay the cost of rewiring.

Another idiot physicist who uses ridiculous analogies to explain things.

As Dirac said, if you can't explain what you are doing in a way that's understandable to the average person, then you don't understand what you are doing.

This kind of 'explanation' is extremely condescending.

As an example of how to do it right, here's Einstein's extremely subtle description of radio:

When asked to explain radio, Einstein said that telegraph is like a long cat with its tail in New York and its head in San Franscisco. When you pull the tail, the head yowls.

"Radio is like that, except there's no cat."

There is nothing that the USA can do to stop AGW, assuming you accept the flawed premise. Maybe nuke China and India. But let's get out the sackcloth and ashes.
Posted by: KBK   2009-02-04 13:03  

#3  The only thing threatening Kaliphornia's farms is suburban sprawl.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2009-02-04 12:16  

#2  Cause everyone knows warm weather is a disaster for plant growth. I wonder how the rest of the country stores water? Perhaps in those little plastic Evian bottles the Greenies are always toting around.
Posted by: ed   2009-02-04 12:13  

#1  "I'm hoping that the American people will wake up," Chu said, and pay the cost of rewiring.

And there it is...
Posted by: tu3031   2009-02-04 11:30  

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