Tim Johnson

Today's Choices Equal Tomorrow's Reality

The effects of climate change on Martha’s Vineyard within the upcoming decades will include, among other things, continuously eroding infrastructure and damage to the local economy.

The effects of climate change on Martha’s Vineyard within the upcoming decades will include, among other things, continuously eroding infrastructure due to frequent so-called nuisance flooding, and damage to the local economy in the wake of one or more highly destructive weather events. This applies under any projected climate change scenario, including full and timely implementation of the Paris Agreement.

Furthermore, there is a strong possibility that we could experience a significant recession within the coming decades, while concurrently suffering debilitating political and social upheavals as a nation. This could be the context within which we will implement adaptation to climate change effects on the Island. While this should not determine our response over the coming years, it should inform our efforts. Above all, it adds even more urgency to make the best possible use of the short window of opportunity we now enjoy.

Just as feedback loops, cascades and tipping points in the world’s natural systems can confound the predictions of climate science, the social, political and economic factors of our times are interrelated, and can become self-reinforcing, interacting with climate disruption to create a truly ominous prognosis for the political, social and economic foundations of human societies — including ours.

We face conditions within the coming decade which on their own account are already extremely dangerous, but which could react with and reinforce one another in a veritable witches’ brew of dysfunction and disruption. It is important to note that most of these trends are long term, deep seated social and economic factors which will not be resolved one way or the other by an election or two. They include:

• Unsustainable deficit spending, and relentless government, corporate and private debt burdens;

• Further intensification of trade wars in an inextricably interdependent world economy;

• Political polarization leading to ever greater shortfalls in governance;

• Broad-spectrum loss of confidence and mistrust of government.

• Trends towards dictatorship undermining the rule of law;

• Increased abject poverty, inequality and social rage/unrest.

To these interrelated forces must be added the predictable effects of climate change, which will increase in intensity and are already baked-in for decades if not centuries to come:

• Drought in some of the world’s breadbaskets, leading to large-scale commodity crop failures followed by price increases and shortages of staple foods or outright famine for the many people already struggling to feed themselves in this country;

• Large, internally-displaced populations moving from threatened coastal and droughtstricken areas of the country;

• Great waves of migration from countries rendered uninhabitable by climate change and war;

• Scale and frequency of simultaneous large-scale natural disasters overwhelming disaster agencies and affecting insurance, manufacture, shipping and trade infrastructure locally, nationally and internationally.

In short, the economic, social and political impact of climate change cannot be overemphasized.

The timing of severe disruption is difficult to predict, but is more likely than not within the next 10 to 20 years. The structure of our local economy and current way of life cannot be presumed to be indefinitely immune to these forces. While the Island may be temporarily buffered by its high concentration of the disproportionate economic and political resources of much of its seasonal population, these resources could falter if the systems sustaining them collapse. Assuming an intact political, social and economic framework at the national level, or a vibrant seasonal/tourism economy at the local level beyond the upcoming decade or two could be overly optimistic.

To make matters worse, the international community is failing spectacularly to mobilize significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, and the predicted effects (along with some that were insufficiently accounted for in the past, such as methane release from melting permafrost or undersea hydrates, or the rapid and permanent loss of Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets) are proceeding apace, in some cases, far faster than anticipated. In other words, our planning must also include consideration of a high-emissions scenario, and allow for the possibility that its effects are closer than we think. Under a business-as-usual emissions scenario, the greatest possible self-reliance of a year-round population on Martha’s Vineyard becomes the overriding priority. We have an advantage here, since this mentality is deeply engrained in New England generally, and all the more so in our Island’s history and character.

If this is the case, what are the implications for the Island’s current efforts to address climate change adaptation?

It is important to note that the funds we spend now, whether state grants, loans or local tax revenues, may be diminished or unobtainable even just a decade or two from now, depending on the robustness of the national economy, and we should plan accordingly. For example, instead of building for the short term, and risk having non-viable infrastructure (and debt) in the future without the means to do anything about it, every major expense the Island undertakes from here on in should ideally endure in a high-end sea level rise scenario, even if it requires a greater current investment to do so. This would mean not only choosing among different climate change adaptation projects, but evaluating these in a comprehensive fashion alongside all other upcoming town and Islandwide needs and priorities and balancing present and future benefitsand needs appropriately to secure our future.

Marina Lent lives in Edgartown. Adapted from her submission to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission on climate change.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 07:36

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Don Klepper-Smith West Tisbury

As a professional economist of 38 years, and former chair of the Governor's Council of Economic Advisors, very well stated and presented. Economics at it's core is about tradeoffs, and stewardship, while less popular, is a responsibility that we all share. Bravo, Marina!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 09:27

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Jack West Tisbury

Scary. Not what is written but that it was written as something other than fiction. A very pessimistic outlook on a world created to continually strive for and never quite achieve balance. That’s why we have, in the short term, weather, and in the long term climate, which has been changing ever since earth’s existence. And for those worried about these dire predictions, take a look at the predictions in An Inconvenient Truth. How did those work out? Oh, that’s right, they didn’t. What does the author of this letter know that Al Gore did not? Now that would be interesting to hear. And please let President Obama know about all of these 10-20 year dire consequences. He just bought a waterfront property. Actions always speak much louder than words...

JS Cape Cod

Couldn't agree more. Planet Earth has been experiencing climate change from it's very beginning and will continue on forever, regardless of what the human race does. The seas will continue to erode the coastline and weather in all it's extreme's will continue to shape the future landscape of this planet we all live on. All the wind turbines,solar panels and electric vehicles will be an expensive cost to bear for a result that will have little results,to stop what Mother nature has in store for us all. Adapting to the ever changing environment ahead is what needs to be planned for as many project's are in process / planning stages to prepare for what will become a reality in the future.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 09:46

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Jesse Dennerlein CLEARWATER

Dear Gazette, I read you for light easy articles about life is on the Vineyard. I don't read you for what is called "hard hitting journalism". If I wanted that I'd read a paper like the New York Slimes or some such drivel. Please don't publish doom and gloom articles like this. Yes, climate change is happening, yes I'm doing something about it but I don't want it to read "We are all going to die" articles from you.

Jane K Lewis Lexington

Dear Jesse,

I find this newspaper very uplifting,. I have been inspired to subscribe to the Gazette because of the beautiful writing and the wonderful community contributions to local discourse.((including , especially , memorial articles about the loved ones who have passed on).

I personally do not want to be a negative commentator, no matter how negative I feel about the world in general. Could please you express something more positive here? Please?

Thank you and peace, Jane

Carol formerly Chilmark

I am grateful for Marina's article. If you need fluff, try Seventeen magazine. Climate change driven by burning fossil fuels is as real and factual as water freezing at 32 degrees F. Sea level rise is inevitable, especially with the widespread climate denialism that blocks technological improvements to blunt its effects.

I'm a fourth generation summer resident and landowner on the Vineyard. Four generations of my family are in four of the Island's graveyards. The Vineyard is at severe risk from sea level rise - what would six feet do? Think of Packers near Five Corners. Five Corners, Beach Road - underwater. The lagoon will be a cove. Chilmark Pond, Tisbury & Edgartown Great Ponds - coves. All because you don't want actual facts to intrude on your delusional view of the world. Please wake up and do a little adulting.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 11:33

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Local yokel/literate human Chilmark

You do realize that thousands of people live on this island year round, right? Your idea that the Gazette should serve as a glossy magazine about "Vineyard Living" instead of as an actual newspaper is really condescending. Real newspapers cover good news, bad news, and a lot of stuff that is just plain boring to people who don't live there. I think you probably could have ignored this article just as easily as the ones about high school sports if you really wanted to.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 11:45

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Chicken Little Chilmark

"Furthermore, there is a strong possibility that we could experience a significant recession within the coming decades, while concurrently suffering debilitating political and social upheavals as a nation."

Anything is possible.

Maybe economic growth will continue, maybe we will work hard to implement more efficient sources of energy, maybe we will reduce-reuse-recycle more.

Maybe the sandbar called Martha's Vineyard will succumb to the millennia of ocean erosion and disappear.

All of this is negative supposition with no purpose or constructive suggestion. AKA-Worthless whining.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 14:48

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Lorraine Edgartown

If the sky is falling(where have I heard that) in relation to climate change drowning all waterfront property, why are all the high net worth people buying waterfront property? Not just on this island but all over the country/world. Oh, perhaps it is not as grim as it is purported to be? Here is my comment: Follow the money.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/31/2020 - 21:30

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Vasha Brunelle VH

Well said Maria. Thanks to you and the Gazette for telling it like it really is.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 02/01/2020 - 00:22

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Peter Becker Port Angeles, WA

Read, study, vote, learn and repeat it again.
That more than anyone or anything will help.
I was first on the Vineyard in 1951, then in 1954, came to live in 1960 and 61; love’s labors lost, I still hold it dear.
Make it work... that’s it. Make it work!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 02/03/2020 - 17:37

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Monica Yriart Edgartown

This piece is rich in prediction and analysis, tightly sewn to a proximate world. My hope is that good use is made of it. It is a concise tool.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/04/2020 - 13:47

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Mike WT

Tell us something we don't already know and experience. What was written here is what has been happening for the last 20 years and has taken a dramatic uptick in the last 3 1/2 years. When will people realize this is going to be and is already a reality.
Oh - how pessimistic - Seriously? - Take the blinders off and you will see better.

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