# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
K!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/11/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-k/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/03C1535E-D2CF-4034-A3D6-4ABDD9A4693F-300x249.png)](…
content/uploads/2023/01/03C1535E-D2CF-4034-A3D6-4ABDD9A4693F.png)
KEELING CURVE ~ Carbon dioxide has increased worldwide from 315 ppm in 1958 to
over 420 ppm in just 64 years
**[The Keeling Curve on the National Geographic Society
Website](https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/keeling-curve)**
The Keeling Curve is a graph that represents the concentration of carbon
dioxide (CO2) in Earth’s atmosphere since 1958. The Keeling Curve is named
after its creator, Dr. Charles David Keeling (1928 to 2005).
Keeling began studying atmospheric carbon dioxide in 1956 by taking air
samples and measuring the amount of CO2 they contained. Over time he noticed a
pattern. The air samples taken at night contained a higher concentration of
CO2 compared to samples taken during the day.
He drew on his understanding of photosynthesis and plant respiration to
explain this observation: Plants take in CO2 during the day to
photosynthesize—or make food for themselves—but at night, they release CO2. By
studying his measurements over the course of a few years, Keeling also noticed
a larger seasonal pattern. He discovered CO2 levels are highest in the spring,
when decomposing plant matter releases CO2 into the air, and are lowest in
autumn when plants stop taking in CO2 for photosynthesis.
Keeling was able to establish a permanent residence at the Mauna Loa
Observatory in Hawai'i, United States, to continue his research. At Mauna Loa,
he discovered global atmospheric CO2 levels were rising nearly every year.
By analyzing the CO2 in his samples, Keeling was able to attribute this rise
to the use of fossil fuels. Since its creation, the Keeling Curve has served
as a visual representation of Keeling’s data, which scientists have continued
to collect since his death in 2005.
#######+++++++#######+++++++#######
[**The Keeling Curve Hits 420 PPM, Scripps Institution of
Oceanography,**](https://keelingcurve.ucsd.edu/2022/05/31/2114/) May 31, 2022
Levels of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide eclipsed 420 parts per million for
the first time in human history in 2021. Scripps Institution of Oceanography
updated this animation, which explains the rise of carbon dioxide
concentration in the atmosphere over the past 300 years and the measurement
our researchers collect at Hawaii’s Mauna Loa, known as the Keeling Curve.
When Scripps Oceanography scientist Charles David Keeling first began taking
measurements in 1958, CO2 levels were at 315 parts per million.
[Check out more details at Scripps
Oceanography:](https://keelingcurve.ucsd.edu/2022/05/31/2114)
<https://keelingcurve.ucsd.edu/2022/05/31/2114>
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/11/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-k/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
J!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/10/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-j/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/52437564-6989-4BCC-A6CA-76115F87160F.jpeg)](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/01/52437564-6989-4BCC-A6CA-76115F87160F.jpeg)
Community solar projects provide solar energy directly to individual users.
**“J” is for Jobs. Get a Job and Work for Yourself, Your Family & Your
Community**
>> From an [Article on Climate Change by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), Nov. 28,
2022
**Jobs, jobs, jobs ~ Six years ago, Beta and Form didn’t exist, and CarbiCrete
consisted of four men holding meetings at a Starbucks. Today, more than four
hundred people work for Beta, three hundred work for Form, and forty work for
CarbiCrete. Ørsted’s operations in North America employ more than six hundred
people directly and thousands indirectly, through contracts for components,
shipping, and logistical support.**
Study after study has concluded that cutting emissions creates jobs. Recently,
a Princeton-based team issued a report detailing how the U.S. could reduce its
net emissions to zero by 2050. The researchers considered several possible
decarbonization “pathways.”
Consider the extreme case. The pathway labelled “high electrification” would,
they projected over time, eliminate sixty-two thousand (62,000) jobs in the
coal industry and four hundred thousand (400,000) in the natural-gas sector.
But it was expected to produce nearly eight hundred thousand (800,000) jobs in
construction, more than seven hundred thousand (700,000) in the solar
industry, and more than a million (1,000,000) in upgrading the grid.
**“For too long, we’ve failed to use the most important word when it comes to
meeting the climate crisis,” President Biden declared last year. “Jobs, jobs,
jobs. For me, when I think climate change, I think jobs.”**
#######+++++++#######+++++++#######
**See Also:** [West Virginia Looks at Community Solar as Legislative
Priority,](https://www.governing.com/next/west-virginia-looks-at-community-
solar-as-legislative-priority) Mike Tony, The Charleston Gazette-Mail,
November 7, 2022
**(TNS) —West Virginia 's leaders, from Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore
Capito to Gov. Jim Justice and members of the state Public Energy Authority,
have a pet phrase for their preferred approach to energy policy: “All of the
above.”**
**Community solar allows customers to receive solar energy without having to
install their own systems, allowing them to benefit from energy generated
offsite, and could save residential customers about 10 percent in electricity
costs.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/10/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-j/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
I!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/09/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-i/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/FA4BD6B9-A45E-4A10-A026-A4EADDF7A737-300x168.jpg)](…
content/uploads/2023/01/FA4BD6B9-A45E-4A10-A026-A4EADDF7A737.jpeg)
WTAP News reports new battery plant for Weirton, WV on 12/26/22
**“I” is for Iron, I is for Imagination and Intention and Innovation!**
[Rusty Batteries Could Greatly Improve Grid Energy
Storage](https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/rusty-batteries-could-
greatly-improve-grid-energy-storage/)
>> _From an Article by John Fialka, E &E News, December 21, 2022_
A U.S. company is designing a large battery that it says could help
decarbonize the nation’s power sector more cheaply than lithium-ion storage
systems — and with domestic materials. Iron-air batteries have a “reversible
rust” cycle that could store and discharge energy for far longer and at less
cost than lithium-ion technology.
The concept, known as the “iron-air battery,” has impressed U.S. experts.
Unlike current lithium-ion batteries that require expensive materials mostly
from other countries such as lithium, cobalt, nickel and graphite, the
proposed battery stores electricity using widely available iron metal.
It operates on what scientists call the principle of “reversible rusting.” The
low cost and high availability of iron could allow iron-air batteries to store
electricity for several days during periods of low solar and wind power
generation. One such iron-air battery is being designed by Form Energy, a
company based in Massachusetts that’s co-run by a former Tesla Inc. official.
Although iron-air batteries were first studied in the early 1970s for
applications such as electric vehicles, more recent research suggests that it
may be a “leading contender” to expand the nation’s future supplies of green
electric power for utilities, according to George Crabtree, director of the
Joint Center for Energy Storage Research at Argonne National Laboratory.
Lithium-ion batteries, which are used in cars and for utility-scale storage,
discharge electric power for about four hours. The much larger iron-air
battery can store and then discharge power for as long as 100 hours, giving
utilities four days of electricity to bridge renewable power gaps that can
occur in U.S. grids.
Crabtree, a physicist, predicted that the iron-air battery would also help the
U.S. decarbonize industrial operations and buttress the Defense Department’s
plans to rely more on renewable energy.
Crabtree pointed out that while U.S. researchers helped invent the lithium-ion
battery in 1970, it took until 1991 to reach the market. Sony Group Corp., a
Japanese company, was the first to sell it. After that, companies based in
China took the lead, and they continue to dominate the world’s lithium-ion
battery market.
Form Energy was born in 2017. It emerged from a consolidation of two smaller
U.S. energy storage companies, one of which was led by Mateo Jaramillo, a
former executive at Tesla.
The co-founders shared a vision to reshape the global electric system by
creating a new class of low-cost multiday storage batteries. They began
testing several different chemistries to make a competitive and domestically
produced battery.
They landed on the iron-air battery, which includes a slab of iron, a water-
based electrolyte and a membrane that feeds a controlled stream of air into
the battery. When discharging, the battery breathes in oxygen from the air and
converts iron metal to rust. While charging, an electrical current converts
the rust back to iron and the battery breathes out oxygen.
Since its founding, the company has raised $832 million from investors,
including Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy Ventures and ArcelorMittal SA, a
Luxembourg-based multinational steel company.
Since 2021, Form Energy has signed contracts to build battery storage
facilities for two utilities. One is Georgia Power Co., the largest subsidiary
of Southern Co. The other is Great River Energy, Minnesota’s second-largest
electric utility, which supplies power to electric cooperatives.
Form Energy is working with ArcelorMittal to develop iron materials that the
steel company would supply to Form Energy. The battery company declined to say
when it would announce the construction of its first factory, or where it
would be. “We’re not talking about that yet,” Jaramillo said in an interview.
His company’s executive team includes Yet-Ming Chiang, its chief science
officer and a materials expert who teaches at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. He holds over 100 U.S. patents.
The initial storage battery, about the size of a home washer-and-drier
combination, will be too big and heavy for cars, but it could replace lithium-
ion batteries for utility-scale storage because it would be one-tenth the cost
and its capacity will be much larger, according to Form Energy.
Jaramillo graduated from Harvard University with an economics degree and later
studied theology at Yale Divinity School. “It probably helped me in more ways
than I could articulate,” he said of his religious studies. “It helped me stay
grounded about what solutions look like in this world. There is nothing
perfect.”
Crabtree, of Argonne National Laboratory, says he’s impressed by Form Energy’s
accomplishments so far. Compared with the 21-year effort by the U.S. to
develop the lithium-ion battery, Form Energy may develop the iron-air battery
in less than nine years. “It shows that it is possible to move quickly when it
comes to climate change. That’s the critical answer,” Crabtree said.
#######+++++++#######+++++++#######
**See Also:** [Climate Change from A to Z, Elizabeth Kolbert, The New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/11/28/climate-change-from…
to-z), November 28, 2022
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/09/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-i/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
H!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/08/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-h/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/F8B5233F-5224-4B64-ABE2-03F781B0076E-300x165.png)](…
content/uploads/2023/01/F8B5233F-5224-4B64-ABE2-03F781B0076E.png)
Cambridge Energy Storage Project, a demonstration plant in Minnesota operated
by Great River Energy that will use Form Energy’s “iron-air” battery
technology.
**H is for Hope! Hope for Better Batteries! Hope for the Best!**
[From an Article by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), 11/28/22
“Hope is the pillar that holds up the world,” Pliny the Elder is supposed to
have observed. “Hope is the dream of a waking man.” Go looking for hopeful
climate stories and they turn up everywhere.
Not long ago, I came across one in a defunct wine distributorship, in
Somerville, Massachusetts. The cavernous warehouse had been taken over by a
company called Form Energy, whose waking dream concerns rust. Rusting usually
proceeds in one direction, and the end result is a corroded nail or screw that
winds up in the trash. But, as iron oxidizes, it gives up electrons.
Therefore, if a current is applied to rust in solution, the process will run
in reverse. At Form, the goal is to use this reverse-rusting trick to make a
new kind of battery, one so cheap and durable it could power an entire city.
Billy Woodford, Form’s chief technology officer, studied material science at
M.I.T. “Batteries have cool technical problems,” he told me as we descended
into the warehouse turned research lab. The huge room was lined with
experimental chambers that resembled glass-fronted refrigerators. Each was
labelled, according to an inside joke that I never quite got, with the name of
a different Oreo variety, like lemon or s’mores or gluten free.
Inside the chambers were collections of some kind of high-tech Tupperware,
with wires poking through the lids. The containers, in turn, held plates of
iron bathing in liquid. Woodford explained that these were test batteries:
“We’ll put in different iron — there’s different versions, depending on
whether it’s produced, say, in Texas or Germany — and then different
electrolytes.”
**_Iron-air batteries’ active components are iron, salt water, and air. They
can soak up energy from wind farms, feeding it into the grid when needed. Form
Energy 's full-scale batteries will be packaged into modules of fifty, each
about the size of a washer and dryer placed side by side. Ten of the modules
will be big enough to fill a shipping container. On blustery days, they
charge, using an electric current to convert rust into iron. On calm days, the
iron rusts and releases electricity into the grid._**
The first thirty shipping containers’ worth have been promised to Great River
Energy, a Minnesota-based utility that buys a lot of wind power. (See the
conceptual plant layout photo above.)
Form’s C.E.O., Mateo Jaramillo, studied theology and later became a Tesla
executive. While at Tesla, he worked on lithium-ion batteries, which are the
sort used in most electric vehicles (and in the Alia), and also, in a slightly
different form, in laptops and cell phones.
“Lithium-ion is fantastic,” Jaramillo told me. “And yet, if that’s the only
tool you have, you still have a really hard time replacing high- capacity coal
and natural-gas plants. To replace those, you need something that’s at least
an order of magnitude cheaper than lithium-ion.” The materials needed for
reversible rusting — air, salt water, and iron — are available in practically
limitless quantities. “Besides coal, iron is the most-mined mineral on earth,”
Jaramillo said. “So it scales.”
#######+++++++#######+++++++#######
**[Billionaire-backed ‘Iron-Air’ Battery Maker Picks WV Site for First
Factory](https://www.powermag.com/billionaire-backed-iron-air-battery-maker-
picks-wv-site-for-first-factory/)** , Darrell Proctor, POWER Magazine,
December 23, 2022
A battery manufacturing company with plenty of high-profile financial backing
said it has picked a site for its first factory that will build “iron-air”
batteries. Form Energy touts its technology as a breakthrough for long-
duration storage of solar and wind power.
Form, which counts Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, and
British tycoon Richard Branson among its supporters, was founded in 2017 by
veterans of the energy storage sector. The group said its mission was to
create low-cost, multi-day energy storage systems. Company officials have said
their iron-air battery can store electricity for as much as 100 hours. They’ve
also said the technology will be competitive with electricity produced by
traditional power plants.
**Form, which is headquartered in Somerville, Massachusetts, on Dec. 22 said
it will begin construction of its first factory in Weirton, West Virginia, in
2023. The company expects to begin manufacturing commercial iron-air battery
systems the following year. The plant’s cost is estimated at about $760
million, and officials said the project would create 750 jobs. Form completed
a $450 million Series E funding round in October.**
Incentive Package ~ West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said his state is providing
Form with an incentive package worth as much as $290 million in what he called
asset-based, performance financing for the factory’s construction. The package
includes $75 million for land purchase and building construction in Weirton.
Justice said he will work with state lawmakers and the federal government to
obtain an additional $215 million.
Mateo Jaramillo, Form’s CEO and co-founder, said Weirton was chosen from among
more than 500 possible locations for the company’s manufacturing plant. He
called Weirton “a historic steel community that sits on a river and has the
rich heritage and know-how to make great things out of iron.” Jaramillo, who
headed Tesla’s energy-storage business before leaving in 2016, said his
company expects “to be generating meaningful revenue in 2025.”
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/08/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-h/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
G!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/07/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-g/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/8C8E6D5D-9049-480B-8BB6-807489E3B070-300x155.png)](…
content/uploads/2023/01/8C8E6D5D-9049-480B-8BB6-807489E3B070.png)
CarbiCrete building blocks made from slag (cement substitute)
**Green Concrete ~ Gee! Cement Substitute Without Releasing Carbon Dioxide!**
Article by [Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), 11/28/22
“We are doing freeze-and-thaw tests here in this lab,” Mehrdad Mahoutian said.
He pried the lid off a plastic container of the sort usually used to store
leftovers. Inside was a gray block about the size of a juice box. It was
sitting in a half inch or so of ice-fringed water.
“This is cement-free concrete,” Mahoutian said, indicating the block. “And
this is salt water. For eighteen hours, they go into the freezer. And, for six
hours, they get melted, basically.”
I managed to find the headquarters of the company named **CarbiCrete** , in an
industrial area of Montreal. Mahoutian, one of the company’s founders, was
showing me around the R. & D. facility. Every few minutes, he was interrupted
by a very loud rumble. “That’s the blocks being made,” he shouted over the
din.
We passed into a second room, where two test walls of cinder block stood
perpendicular to each other. Both were equipped with a shower apparatus made
from PVC pipe, which was dripping water. A fan blew the water toward the
blocks. Mahoutian explained that one test wall had been constructed with
ordinary cinder blocks, the other with a new kind of block fabricated by
**CarbiCrete**. The shower arrangement was gauging how the two walls compared
in terms of water penetration. “In a few hours, we’ll measure the dampness and
do some calculations,” he told me.
Concrete represents one of the world’s most obdurate carbon problems. Its key
ingredient, Portland cement, is made by grinding up limestone, adding clay,
and heating the mixture to more than two thousand degrees. The process demands
a lot of energy, which is usually supplied by burning coal. But, more
fundamentally, the issue with cement is its chemistry; heating limestone to
the point that it transforms into quicklime unavoidably releases CO2. In 2021,
some thirty billion tons of concrete were produced worldwide, almost four tons
for every single person on the planet. The associated carbon dioxide emissions
accounted for roughly eight per cent of the global total— more than aviation
and shipping combined. Producing cement-free concrete, or what is sometimes
referred to as green concrete, isn’t sexy, but it’s essential.
[In place of cement, CarbiCrete makes use of a waste
product](https://www.waste360.com/medical-waste/waste-based-cement-
alternative-provides-functional-benefits-while-capturing-and) — the slag left
over from steel production. It pounds the slag into powder and mixes in
crushed rock and water. The resulting slurry, which looks a lot like
conventional concrete, can then be molded into blocks or tiles. Gee!
C **arbiCrete bills its product, which for the time being is also known as
CarbiCrete, not just as carbon-neutral but as carbon-negative.** Mahoutian led
me to a row of machines that resembled rice cookers. Each one was attached to
a cannister of CO2. Inside the machines, little blocks of damp CarbiCrete were
reacting with carbon dioxide; instead of releasing the gas, the blocks were
soaking it up.
“Please touch,” Mahoutian instructed. The machines were hot. This, he
explained, was because the reaction, rather than requiring heat, generated it.
For now, CarbiCrete buys its CO2 from a supplier. The plan, though, is
eventually to use carbon dioxide that’s been captured at, say, a power plant
or a steel mill.
“What we are doing basically is killing three birds with one stone,” Mahoutian
told me. “We are not using cement. We are permanently capturing CO2. And we’re
reducing the need for land!lls.” As I was getting ready to leave, Mahoutian
asked if I wanted a CarbiCrete tile or cinder block to bring home with me. I
thought for a while and then decided to take both. Gee!
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/07/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-g/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
F!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/06/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-f/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/228AB5DF-B26A-4F97-8621-4C897D6087F6-300x120.jpg)](…
content/uploads/2023/01/228AB5DF-B26A-4F97-8621-4C897D6087F6.jpeg)
(new) Dolls Run Well Pad for Drilling & Fracking in Monongalia County, WV
(click on photo to expand)
**OMG! Opening Public Lands to Drilling & Fracking Without Restraint!**
>>> _Technical Article on[Fracking by Randi
Pokladnik](https://ohvec.org/author/randi/), Submitted January 1, 2023_
**The Republican dominated Ohio Senate and House recently passed the Amended
HB 507 bill. It now awaits a signature from Gov. DeWine who can veto the bill
or allow it to go into law after a ten-day period. The bill was originally
intended to address poultry sales and food safety, however, at the last minute
an amendment, (134-3853) was added to HB 507 in the Senate. Basically, the
amendment will force state agencies to open their land to oil and gas drilling
with no exceptions. The amendment creates an atmosphere where citizens are
basically locked out of any public review process and refused the ability to
make comments on the leasing process. It by-passes any considerations of
impacts to the environment and recreation.**
Pre-19th century, Ohio was 95 percent forested. Today only 30 percent of
forested land remains (8.0 million acres) and only 11 percent is owned by
state and local governments. The Ohio State Park system encompasses about
170,000 acres of land and over 31 million visitors come to Ohio parks each
year.
For many people, both in and out of the state, state parks and forests remain
a sanctuary; a place for them to escape their hectic lives and find the peace
that nature offers. It also provides a space for recreating, bird watching,
fishing, hunting, hiking, canoeing and biking. Additionally, a study by The
Ohio State University determined that outdoor recreationalists’ trips bring in
$8.1 billion to Ohio’s economy and the sector employs 133,000 workers.
**Fracking and all the build-out that this industry requires will dramatically
change the landscape of Ohio’s parks and forests.** Who wants to hike through
a park with frack pads and fracking infrastructure? Who wants to ingest wild
game and fish taken from areas where fracking is occurring?
**Since 2005, and the passage of the Energy Policy Act, also known as the
Haliburton Loophole, fracking remains virtually unregulated. Who will
guarantee that every stage of the process will be conducted in a way so as not
to disrupt the state lands that supposedly belong to Ohio’s citizens?**
**A[study in West
Virginia](https://insideclimatenews.org/news/06022011/natural-gas-drilling-
fells-1000-trees-w-va-forest-scientists-say/) showed forest ecosystems are
negatively affected by forest clearing, erosion, and road building during
fracking.** Vegetation death was also noted after frack fluids were sprayed on
the surrounding trees. [Peer reviewed studies show that watersheds surrounding
frack well pads test positive for the radioactive substances found in frack
waste water, which consists of fracturing fluid and salts, heavy metals,
hydrocarbons, and radioactive material accumulated from natural underground
sources.](https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1890/13032…
**[Fracking well pads and infrastructure will require clearing areas (cutting
trees and
vegetation).](https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1890/1…)
This will require areas of anywhere from four to twenty-five acres.** Not only
will this fragment the forest it will cause other effects that to date are
still not clearly understood or studied. [This includes additional
fragmentation that could affect plant
reproduction](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16913941/). Fracking can also
introduce and encourage the [spread of invasive
species](https://www.digitaljournal.com/world/shale-gas-development-promote…
spread-of-invasive-plant-species/article/498352) via the gravel delivered to
build pads and roads, and in mud on the tires and undercarriages of trucks
traveling those roads.
Traffic in the region will increase tremendously, becoming a maintenance
burden on roads, and also a hazard to local citizens and visitors. [Each well
drilled requires approximately 592 one-way
trips](https://studylib.net/doc/7349071/known-and-potential-impacts), with a
truck that carries between 80-100,000 lbs. The traffic from the development of
one well is equivalent to 3.4 million car trips.
**The process of high-pressure hydraulic fracking necessitates the use of 4-6
million gallons of water per well. This surface water will no doubt be
withdrawn from the local streams, resulting in harm to aquatic
organisms.[Fracking fluids contain chemical additives, e.g. friction reducers,
biocides and surfactants, many of which are known carcinogens and endocrine
disruptors.](https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/10.1289/ehp.1409535) Very little is
known about the potential effects of the chemicals, metals, organics or other
contaminants once they enter terrestrial or aquatic food webs.**
**Climate change, the elephant in the room, is being exacerbated by our
reliance on fossil fuels.** [Fracking operations release fugitive methane
emissions and are much higher than the industry reports. Methane gas is about
86 times as potent as carbon dioxide in magnifying heat related to climate
change.](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/fracking-bo…
tied-to-methane-spike-in-earths-atmosphere) The aesthetic beauty as well as
biodiversity of the forest will be impacted by allowing fossil fuel companies
to frack the landscape.
Once again, Ohio’s politicians place the interests of the oil and gas industry
ahead of Ohio’s citizens. In a word, “fracking”!
>>> Randi Pokladnik is a Scientist residing at Tappan Lake, Uhrichsville, Ohio
44683. She was born and raised in Ohio. She earned an associate degree in
Environmental Engineering, a BA in Chemistry, MA and PhD in Environmental
Studies. She is certified in hazardous materials regulations and holds a
teaching license in science and math.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/06/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-f/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
E!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/05/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-e/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/BF8873F0-D479-44FD-
BEC8-655D8FF442E3.jpeg)](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/BF8873F0-D479-44FD-BEC8-655D8FF442E3.jpeg)
Since 2016, the U. S. has added over 35,000 MW of off-shore wind turbine
capacity
**Electrify Everything ~ Let’s try again, this time with feeling**
.
[Article by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), November
28, 2022
**BIWF2 is a wind turbine that sticks up out of the Atlantic Ocean** , about
fifteen miles off the coast of Rhode Island. **It’s six hundred feet tall,
which is higher than the Washington Monument, and its blades are more than two
hundred feet long.** I’m on a boat designed to transport crews to offshore
wind farms. The captain maneuvers right up to the metal stanchions that hold
the turbine in place, so the blades are rotating directly overhead. They make
a fantastic whooshing sound that builds and fades, builds and fades. The
effect is at once thrilling and terrifying, as if some gigantic bird were
trying to land on the deck. “Ah,” everyone on board exclaims as another blade
descends.
**BIWF2 has one neighbor half a nautical mile to the north and three more
neighbors to the south. Together the turbines make up Block Island Wind Farm,
America’s first offshore wind operation. A dozen more wind projects are
currently planned off the East Coast, from Massachusetts to North Carolina.**
The turbines that will be erected in these projects will make BIWF2 look puny.
Staring up at the blades, I am looking into the future — or at least a future
—and it’s inspiring. BIWF2 is a symbol of what can be accomplished when people
put their minds to it.
In 1992, the year of the Earth Summit, the world had exactly one offshore wind
farm, called Vindeby. Situated off the Danish island of Lolland, it consisted
of eleven turbines, which, collectively, produced less power than BIWF2 does
today. Now there are scores of offshore farms, most of them in European and
Chinese waters. The largest, known as Hornsea 2, is in the North Sea, off the
English coast; it comprises a hundred and sixty-five turbines, each so massive
that a single sweep of its blades can power a household for a day.
Block Island Wind Farm and Hornsea 2 are owned by the same company, which used
to be known as Danish Oil and Natural Gas, or dong, but recently— and for
obvious reasons — changed its name, to Ørsted. (It also owned Vindeby, which
was decommissioned in 2017.) **As more turbines have gone up, costs have
plunged; just in the past decade, the price of offshore wind energy has
declined by half.**
**Onshore wind has grown even faster, and its cost, too, has plummeted. In
many parts of the world, it’s now cheaper to put up turbines than it is to
operate an existing power plant that burns natural gas. In places with a lot
of wind, such as Denmark, Ireland, and western Oklahoma, there’s sometimes so
much power pouring into the grid that producers have to pay to get rid of
it.**
**The price of solar power, meanwhile, has declined even more spectacularly.
Since 2010, it’s dropped by more than eighty per cent. According to the
International Energy Agency, solar power now offers “some of the lowest-cost
electricity ever seen.”**
The rapidly falling price of renewables makes it possible to imagine a not too
distant future in which the U.S., indeed the world, generates all its
electricity emissions-free. Already there are brief periods — on the order of
minutes —when California can produce enough electricity from renewables to
meet its demand. In Denmark, this happens for entire windy days. (It occurred
two days in a row this past May.)
**And, once it’s possible to imagine a carbon-free grid, all sorts of other
opportunities open up. Substitute electric motors for internal-combustion
engines and cars, too, can run emissions-free. The same goes for trucks and
buses, ferries and forklifts. Plug them in! Tear out boilers and replace them
with heat pumps! Swap gas ranges for induction stoves! Electrify as much as
possible. _Ideally, electrify everything._** e!
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/05/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-e/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
D!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/04/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-d/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/716EB733-FCE2-4469-B45F-1DB2672F48BB.jpeg)](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/01/716EB733-FCE2-4469-B45F-1DB2672F48BB.jpeg)
Polar vortex brings despair to most of the continental United States
**“D” for Despair ~ The Climate Change “Despair” in Winter Storm Elliott**
Technical Article by Randi Pokladnik, Submitted January 1, 2023
**Some will use the recent cold weather event to claim climate change is not
real and the planet isn’t warming. But, when one looks at the actual science
behind these “Arctic bomb cyclones” and the record-breaking Winter Storm
Elliott, it is obvious that climate change has played a significant role.**
This Christmas 2022, many of us might have felt like we were enacting the 2004
movie “ **The Day After Tomorrow** ”. The movie is loosely based on a theory
called “ **abrupt climate change** ”. [The ocean’s thermohaline conveyor
normally circulates ocean water around the
planet.](https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA469325.pdf) Cold, salty ocean water
sinks and pulls warmer fresh surface water in to replace the sinking water.
This sets up a deep-sea current that circulates water round the planet. If the
belt shuts down, the northern hemisphere abruptly cools while the southern
hemisphere warms.
[Paleoclimate records from Greenland ice cores show that the conveyor belt
shut down near the end of the last ice
age.](https://news.illinois.edu/view/6367/207427) The ocean circulation stops
when higher water temperatures and the addition of more freshwater cause the
salinity and density of seawater to drop. A warming planet and melting
freshwater could trigger another shut-down of the belt, throwing North America
and Europe into frigid cold temperatures for hundreds of years.
While most scientists agree that what happened in the movie (overnight change)
will never occur, USA citizens witnessed some dramatic weather changes in
matter of hours. Denver, Colorado experienced a temperature drop of 70 degrees
in an 18-hour period. Winter Storm Elliott affected over two-thirds of our
population and almost every state except the South Western area. There were
record setting winds and cold temperatures in our region, blizzard conditions
in the plain states and feet of snow in the New England area; even Florida
broke some records for cold temperatures. Meteorologists say this storm will
be a once in a generation storm.
**So what caused Winter Storm Elliott?** The [northern polar
vortex](https://www.ecowatch.com/polar-vortex-explained-2650399482.html)
played a major role in the crushing cold that blanketed the North American
continent. There are two polar vortices on our planet, one which spins around
the North Pole and the other spins around the South Pole. [We are dealing with
the northern vortex which was first described in an article published in
1853.](https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Living_Age.html?hl=de&id=Df…
Normally, low-pressure cold air circulates counterclockwise and inward towards
the North Pole. The polar jet stream (high-altitude high-speed wind currents)
helps hold the vortex in place, much like an old-fashioned girdle held our
bulges in place. However, a weakened polar jet stream causes tiny breaks in
the “girdle” and allows the cold vortex to seep out of its circular orbit
dipping southward. It is like someone opening the refrigerator door and the
cold air seeps through your house.
[It is thought that climate change is causing a destabilization of the polar
jet stream](https://www.ecowatch.com/winter-storm-elliott-climate-
crisis.html). Scientists say that the Arctic region is warming faster than any
other area on the globe, on average four times faster in the past forty years.
As the polar air warms, the temperature differences between that air and mid-
latitude air lessens. This causes a “wobble” in the jet stream, or weakening
of the “girdle”, allowing the cold air to advance south.
**This year’s[2022 Arctic Report Card](https://www.noaa.gov/news-
release/human-caused-climate-change-fuels-warmer-wetter-stormier-arctic),
authored by 147 experts from 11 nations, tells the disturbing story of the
effects of climate change on the Arctic. Some of the changes include:
shrinking sea ice, warming atmospheric temperatures, and shorter periods of
snow cover. These could all play a role in more frequent polar air intrusions
into our region.**
So far at least fifty deaths have been attributed to the storm, with at least
twenty-seven in New York State. More than 8,305 flights were cancelled and
millions of people spent Christmas day without power. The economic impact
“will likely be in the billions.”
Scientists have been warning us that the time frame for mitigating climate
change is quickly closing. [The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said
in their 2022 report](https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/), “The dangers of
climate change are mounting so rapidly that they could soon overwhelm the
ability of both nature and humanity to adapt, creating a harrowing future in
which floods, fires and famine displace millions, species disappear and the
planet is irreversibly damaged.”
**Winter Storm Elliott proved to be an example of how we humans cannot
successfully adapt to abrupt changes in our weather, even though we have
access to advance technology. As climate changes occur more often and at a
faster rate, we find that adapting to these changes will become that much
harder and more expensive. Even more alarming is the fact that many of the
species we share the planet with will not be able to adapt but will instead
succumb to extinction.**
>>> Randi Pokladnik is a Scientist residing at Tappan Lake, Uhrichsville, Ohio
44683. She was born and raised in Ohio. She earned an associate degree in
Environmental Engineering, a BA in Chemistry, MA and PhD in Environmental
Studies. She is certified in hazardous materials regulations and holds a
teaching license in science and math.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/04/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-d/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
C!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/03/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-c/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/A7D64FD5-0896-406D-9BF5-02AA417F9248.jpeg)](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/01/A7D64FD5-0896-406D-9BF5-02AA417F9248.jpeg)
Rational analysis favors a “carbon tax” called a “dividend”
**“C” for Capitalism & Climate Change**
[Article by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), November
28, 2022
**What’s the matter here? Why has so little progress been made on climate
change, even as the dangers have become ever more apparent?**
According to one school of thought, the problem has to do with incentives.
There’s a great deal of money to be made selling fossil fuels — just in the
first quarter of 2022, twenty-five of the world’s largest oil-and-gas
producers announced profits of close to a hundred billion dollars — and still
more money to be made by burning fossil fuels to make stuff to sell, from
sunglasses to steel girders.
**Meanwhile, the costs of climate change can be fobbed off on someone else. To
use the technical term, they are a “negative externality.” In the words of the
Stern Review, a report commissioned by the British government in 2005, climate
change “is the greatest and widest-ranging market failure ever seen.”**
**By this account, the obvious solution is to realign the incentives — to
internalize the externalities. If the cost of the damage caused by a ton of
CO2 was borne by the business (or individual) responsible for emitting that
ton, then the business (or individual) would be motivated to cut back.**
**“A carbon tax offers the most cost-effective lever to reduce carbon
emissions at the scale and speed that is necessary,” a 2019 statement signed
by thirty-five hundred economists, including twenty-eight Nobel Prize winners,
declared. Such a tax would move “the invisible hand of the marketplace to
steer economic actors towards a low-carbon future.”**
**According to a second school of thought, the trouble runs a whole lot
deeper. Our political system is dominated by corporate money in general and
fossil-fuel money in particular.** (Last year, the oil-and-gas industry
reportedly spent a hundred and twenty million dollars lobbying Washington, and
it probably spent a great deal more via front groups.)
**It’s therefore naïve to imagine that policies that cut into fossil-fuel
profits will be enacted. And even if they were, they wouldn’t solve the
essential problem, which is that the “invisible hand” always grasps for
more.** If it’s not more oil, it will be more lithium to build batteries, and
if it’s not more lithium it will be more cobalt, mined from the bottom of the
sea.
**“When it comes to global warming, we know that the real problem is not just
fossil fuels — it is the logic of endless growth that is built into our
economic system,” Jason Hickel, an economic anthropologist at the Autonomous
University of Barcelona, has written.**
**[Climate change can’t be dealt with using the tools of
capitalism](https://youtu.be/Jdaxehd0cF0), because it is a product of
capitalism. It can be dealt with only by throwing off capitalism in favor of
something else — a system aimed not at growth but at “degrowth.”**
“The difficult truth is that, to prevent climate and ecological catastrophe,
we need to level down” is how the British environmental writer George Monbiot
recently put it.
**A third line of thought — perhaps too bleak and unpopular to be called a
school — is that, if big change is hard, bigger change is even harder. How are
we going to build a whole new economic system if we can’t even enact a carbon
tax?**
#######+++++++#######+++++++#######
**See Also:** [Naomi Klein - This Changes
Everything](https://youtu.be/Jdaxehd0cF0), Bioneers, November 5, 2014
Climate change as more than an “issue.” It’s a civilizational wake-up call
delivered in the language of fires, floods, storms and droughts. It demands
that we challenge the dominant economic policies of deregulated capitalism and
endless resource extraction. Climate change is also the most powerful weapon
in the fight for equality and social justice, and real solutions are emerging
from the rubble of our failing systems.
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/03/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-c/>
# [Climate Change Resists Narrative, Yet the Alphabet Prevails (A to Z): Now
B!](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/02/climate-change-resists-narrativ…
yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-b/)
[![](https://www.frackcheckwv.net/wp-
content/uploads/2023/01/C89CC715-C6AF-4B3B-A498-37780F390D56.jpeg)](https:/…
content/uploads/2023/01/C89CC715-C6AF-4B3B-A498-37780F390D56.jpeg)
Greta Thunberg brings much needed logic and truth to bear overall!
**Greta Thunberg Says Most Climate Talk is “Blah, Blah, Blah”**
[Article by Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker
Magazine](https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/elizabeth-kolbert), November
28, 2022
**On September 28, 2021, at the Youth4Climate conference, held in Milan, Greta
Thunberg took the stage. Sitting near her was the city’s mayor, Giuseppe Sala,
wearing a mask. Thunberg, who is five feet tall, could barely be seen over the
lectern. She had removed her mask and was smiling.**
**“Climate change is not only a threat, it is above all an opportunity to
create a healthier, greener, and cleaner planet which will bene!t all of us,”
she began. “We must seize this opportunity—we can achieve a win-win in both
ecological conservation and high-quality development. . . . We need to walk
the talk; if we do this together, we can do this.
“When I say ‘climate change,’ what do you think of ?” she went on. “I think of
jobs — green jobs.” This received a round of applause.
“We must find a smooth transition towards a low-carbon economy,” Thunberg
said. “There is no Planet B. There is no Planet Blah—blah, blah, blah; blah,
blah, blah.” Her listeners, including Sala, started to realize that they’d
been had. The applause died down.
“Build Back Better—blah, blah, blah,” Thunberg continued. “Green economy—blah,
blah, blah. “Net zero by 2050—blah, blah, blah.
“Net zero—blah, blah, blah. “Climate neutral—blah, blah, blah.**
**“This is all we hear from our so-called leaders: words — words that sound
great, but so far have led to no action,” Thunberg said. “Of course we need
constructive dialogue, but they’ve now had thirty years of blah, blah, blah,
and where has that led us?”**
**Five countries are responsible for over half of all historical CO2
emissions, namely United States, China, Russia, Germany and the United
Kingdom. About a hundred and ninety countries are responsible for the other
half.**
**It was thirty years ago that the world’s “so-called leaders” gathered in Rio
de Janeiro for the so-called Earth Summit.** Everyone agreed that radical
change was needed. To avert disaster, global CO2 emissions, which were then
running at around twenty-two billion metric tons a year, would have to be
reduced, eventually almost to zero. How this would happen, no one really knew.
**Still, the goal of preventing “dangerous” warming was enshrined in the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, which President George
H. W. Bush cheerfully signed.** “Some find the challenges ahead overwhelming,”
Bush said. “I believe that their pessimism is unfounded.”
**A follow-up “conference of the parties,” or COP, took place in Kyoto in
1997.** By then, annual global emissions had risen to twenty-four billion
tons. After much back-and-forth, it was agreed that something had to be done.
**This Kyoto Protocol, an addendum to the Framework Convention, laid out
specific emissions-reduction targets for countries to meet.**
**“I am both determined and optimistic that we can succeed,” Vice President Al
Gore told the diplomats gathered in Japan.**
**After Kyoto, global emissions kept on rising, only faster. By 2009, they’d
climbed to thirty-two billion tons a year. That fall, President Barack Obama
"flew to Copenhagen for yet another conference of the parties — COP-15. “I
believe that we can act boldly, and decisively, in the face of this common
threat,” he declared.**
**By 2015, emissions had increased to thirty-five billion tons a year. At that
year’s COP No. 21 — held in Paris, it was decided that, at last, really and
truly, it was time to get serious.** “The decisions you make here will
reverberate down through the ages,” the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban
Ki-moon, told the delegates. Nevertheless, emissions continued to rise. **In
the past thirty years, humans have added as much CO2 to the atmosphere as they
did in the previous thirty thousand.**
**At some point during all the “blah, blah, blah”-ing — it’s hard to say when,
exactly — climate change ceased to be a prospective problem and became a clear
and present one. Since Rio, the Arctic ice cap has shrunk by two-fifths.
Greenland has shed some four trillion metric tons of ice, and mountain
glaciers have lost six trillion tons. Heat waves are now hotter, droughts
deeper, and storms more intense. In some parts of the world, the wildfire
season never ends.**
**One conclusion to draw from this pattern is that the world isn’t going to
avoid “dangerous” warming. Global leaders will continue to gather at COPs —
this year’s, in Sharm el-Sheikh, just concluded — and to speak loftily about
“net zero” and “a low-carbon economy.” But nothing will change, and, as a
result, everything will change. There will be large-scale crop failures. The
Greenland ice sheet will start to collapse — it may already be collapsing —
and, owing to sea-level rise in some places and desertifcation in others,
large swaths of the globe will become uninhabitable.**
**This conclusion is not, however, the one that Thunberg chose to draw when
she spoke at the Youth4Climate conference. “Right now we are still very much
speeding in the wrong direction,” she told the crowd in Milan. “But, of
course, we can still turn this around — it is entirely possible.**
**“The leaders like to say, ‘We can do this,’ ” Greta went on. “They obviously
don’t mean it, but we do — we can do this. I’m absolutely convinced that we
can.” Or, as Thunberg herself might put it, Blah, blah, blah.**
URL: <https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2023/01/02/climate-change-resists-
narrative-yet-the-alphabet-prevails-a-to-z-now-b/>