Newsletter ~ July 2020

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MONTHLY NEWSLETTER JULY 2020

Woods Hole Research Center

Cody O'Loughlin

Reminder: Science works Dr. Philip Duffy WHRC President and Executive Director

The ongoing failure of our national response to COVID-19 highlights the challenges we face in managing the more complex and seemingly more distant threat of climate change. As anticipated by epidemiologists, premature and un-coordinated “reopenings” in the US have produced a surge in new coronavirus cases. Daily new case numbers have tripled in the past month, surpassing 60,000 for the first time on July 8. The US leads the world in total cases, with 3.2 million, followed by Brazil with 1.8M. Even though the virus came to Europe first—giving us the chance to learn from their experience—the EU has done a far better job of containing the virus than we have (see figure). We have more than three times as many cumulative cases per million people (9,500) as Canada (2,800), France (2,600), or Germany (2,300)—countries with cultures and systems of law and government which are very similar to ours. Our daily new cases now exceed those in the EU more than ten-fold, even though their population is 35% greater than ours.

These numbers send the clear message that science-based policies work, and that policies which run contrary to science don’t. It's clear what needs to be done to contain coronavirus, in part because successful examples elsewhere provide a blueprint. And one would hope that a death rate approaching 1,000 per day would create a sense of urgency and purpose. If we can’t execute an informed, coordinated response under these circumstances, it is difficult to imagine that we’ll do that in the case of climate change, which is a much more complex challenge and which is widely, if incorrectly, perceived to be a more distant threat.

That perception persists, even though climate change is killing people right now, because harms from climate change are difficult to recognize as such. To a great extent, climate change makes existing problems (like hurricanes and wildfires) worse, rather than creating new ones. This means that individual events like hurricanes and their associated mortality can be attributed to climate change only on a probabilistic basis, and even then, only after a careful study has been done. We can say, for example, that the extreme rainfall in Houston from Hurricane Harvey was made 3.5 times more likely* as a result of climate change. This type of attribution makes causation much less clear, even though the harms are just as real. It makes it easy for folks (well-intentioned and otherwise) not to recognize harms from climate change for what they are. By contrast, even though COVID testing has been limited in the US, there are nonetheless diagnostic tests which make it relatively straightforward to attribute individual deaths to COVID, and to add up the total burden of mortality.

One reason for our ineffective responses to both COVID and climate change is political polarization. This polarization is needless and also unfounded, because we all face terrible consequences. Both of these hazards, in fact, threaten political stability and social order; history provides ample proof of this. Even so, very few people understand how much is at stake.

SCIENCE WORKS continued on next page

WHRC is an independent research organization where scientists study climate change and how to solve it, from the Amazon to the Arctic. Learn more at www.whrc.org.


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