https://www.newyorker.com/news/annals-of-a-warming-planet/are-we-finally-ready-to-tackle-the-other-greenhouse-gas

Are We Finally Ready to Tackle the Other Greenhouse Gas?I’ve long felt
<https://e360.yale.edu/features/how-climate-activists-failed-to-make-clear-the-problem-with-natural-gas-mckibben>
that
one of my great failings as a climate communicator has come in trying to
get across the dangers posed by methane, the second most damaging
greenhouse gas, after carbon dioxide. Despite long years of many people
trying to underscore the risks of methane, our go-to shorthand for climate
pollution remains “carbon.” That’s why companies and political leaders
boast about how much they’ve reduced their carbon emissions, but, if they
managed the trick by substituting gas for coal, their total contribution to
global warming has barely budged
<https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/global-warming-terrifying-new-chemistry/>—because
natural gas is another word for methane, and because when it invariably
leaks from frack wells and pipelines it traps heat, molecule for molecule,
much more effectively than CO2.Now, finally, methane appears to be having
its day in the sun. A key thing to understand about methane (CH4) is that
it doesn’t hang around in the atmosphere anywhere near as long as CO2: its
life span is measured in decades, not centuries. While methane is in the
air, it traps a lot of heat, but a dramatic reduction in the amount of
CH4 would
be a quick fix that would help slow the rise of global temperatures, giving
us more time to work on the carbon quandary. As Stanford University’s Rob
Jackson told me, last week, the best estimate is that methane caused about
a third of the global warming we’ve seen in the past decade, not far behind
the contributions of CO2.The first way to reduce methane in the atmosphere,
of course, is to stop building anything new that’s connected to gas: stop
installing gas cooktops and gas furnaces, and substitute electrical
appliances. And stop building new gas-fired power plants, instead
substituting sun, wind, and battery power. And, as a really important new
study <https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ese3.956> by the
star energy academics Bob Howarth and Mark Jacobson emphasizes, by all
means do not start using natural gas to produce hydrogen, even if you’re
capturing the carbon emissions from the process. This so-called “blue
hydrogen,” beloved by oil and gas companies, and included in the bipartisan
infrastructure bill, does not cut global-warming emissions, in large part
because of the methane that vents out in the process. If we have to live
with some natural gas for a while (and there are an awful lot of furnaces
that will take years to switch out), then we should reduce leaks as best we
can—a process made infinitely harder by the Trump Administration’s decision
<https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/13/climate/trump-methane.html> to stop
monitoring the problem at all.But methane doesn’t just—or even mostly—come
from fossil fuels. It’s also emitted by cattle, by rice production, and,
naturally, from wetlands. Our actions are making these sources bigger—we’re
raising more cattle, for instance, and, as temperatures rise, marshes give
off more
<https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/news/climate-change-projected-set-substantial-rise-methane-emissions-wetlands>
of
the gas. Scientists continue to fear that truly huge increases in methane
could come from a warming Arctic, both from thawing permafrost and from
underwater methane clathrates, or methane ice formations, which are likely
to melt as temperatures rise. (Russian researchers continue to find clues
<https://www.theguardian.com/science/2020/oct/27/sleeping-giant-arctic-methane-deposits-starting-to-release-scientists-find>
that
such releases may be beginning, but so far the spike in methane seems to be
coming from other sources.)Given both the threat and the opportunity, some
scientists have begun wondering whether there might be ways to scrub some
methane from the atmosphere. As with carbon dioxide, you can remove CH4 with
“direct air capture,” which uses machines that filter the atmosphere to
remove the molecules. But, as with CO2, this is, for the moment anyway, too
expensive to do at scale. So a group of scientists at the California
nonprofit Methane Action is looking at ways to catalyze reactions in the
atmosphere that could transform the methane, and they think they may have
found a method that makes use of ship smokestacks. Daphne Wysham, a veteran
environmentalist and the group’s C.E.O., explains, “Many ships now burn
bunker fuels that contain iron. While bunker fuels are terribly polluting,
one positive aspect of the combustion of bunker fuels with iron is that
they may be inadvertently enhancing one of two natural ‘sinks’ for
methane—the chlorine atom. Our scientists hypothesize that, when bunker
fuel is burned, iron particles end up in the smokestack of the ship, and
that the mix of iron, sunshine, and salt-sea spray is generating a mixture
of iron trichloride and chlorine atoms, which may be oxidizing methane in
the ship’s plume. To prove that hypothesis, a crew from the Netherlands
plans to measure the chlorine chemistry of these shipping plumes, using
special equipment to discover whether or not the methane is being oxidized
in conjunction with the chlorine radicals given off by the sea spray.” (An
interesting irony: on Friday, James Hansen, the world’s premier climate
scientist, reported
<https://mailchi.mp/caa/july-temperature-update-faustian-payment-comes-due?e=489492a5ef>
that
one reason temperatures are rising right now is, as we necessarily switch
off fossil fuels, the lowered levels of aerosol pollution in the atmosphere
result in fewer clouds of smog blocking the sun. It is, as Hansen put it, a
Faustian bargain come due. And one place that pollution is being reduced,
he says, is in shipborne emissions, as mariners turn to cleaner fuels.)If
the Methane Action team’s hypothesis pans out, the scientists, most of whom
are European, might be able to figure out how to amp up
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1309104221000891> the
scale of the reaction, to remove larger quantities of methane. They have
proceeded carefully, getting scores of prominent climate experts
<https://methaneaction.org/expert-statement-oxidation-methane/> to endorse
studying the idea—Americans will recognize some of them, such as Michael
Mann, of Penn State. (The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change gave the idea a nod
<https://methaneaction.org/new-ipcc-report-includes-methane-removal-as-part-of-the-path-to-containing-climate-change/>
in
its most recent report
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/08/23/the-uns-terrifying-climate-report>.)
Mann’s an interesting champion because, like many people in the climate
movement, he has been unenthusiastic
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/apr/22/climate-crisis-emergency-earth-day>
about
the rapid adoption of another experiment that seems superficially similar:
plans to “geoengineer” the atmosphere by pouring sulfur into it to block
some of the sun’s rays.There are major differences between these
experiments. First, as Wysham points out, the smokestack “experiment is
already underway, inadvertently, with iron in bunker fuels.” Second, the
moral-hazard argument—the idea that, if you block the sun, oil companies
will use it as an excuse to keep churning out fossil fuels—seems a little
less pressing in this case: methane removal could become a tool for the
fossil-fuel industry to keep fracking for natural gas, but most of the
methane that must be removed actually doesn’t come from fossil fuels.Job
No. 1 is to end the combustion of fossil fuels, and fast; nothing can get
in the way of that. But if, while we fight the fight, there are methods to
ease the heat a little without tossing Big Oil a new lifeline, those are
worth investigating.Passing the MicSunrun, the largest rooftop-solar-panel
installer in the country, announced earlier this month that it had hired
Mary Powell as its C.E.O. After a career making protective outerwear for
dogs, Powell ran Green Mountain Power, Vermont’s main utility, where she
focussed on sustainability. (Among other accomplishments, Green Mountain is
the only utility in the country to have divested
<https://greenmountainpower.com/gmp-announces-divestment-of-pension-funds-from-fossil-fuels/>
its
pension fund from fossil fuels.) I wrote
<https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/06/29/power-to-the-people> about
some of Powell’s work in 2015, and got in touch with her again when I heard
about her new appointment. (Our conversation has been edited for clarity
and length.)I served as the C.E.O. of Green Mountain Power from 2008
through 2019. During that time, I liked to think of G.M.P. as the
“un-utility” utility. Our whole focus was to provide a low-carbon,
low-cost, highly reliable, and more decentralized power grid to Vermonters.
G.M.P. was the first utility to help customers go solar and go off-grid,
and to provide shared storage services in their homes. We successfully
reduced Vermont’s carbon footprint while decreasing customers’ bills.I plan
to use my experience to help advance much faster adoption of solar power at
the utilities. Fundamentally, it is about shifting from a culture of “no”
to a culture of “yes.” We must embrace as much radical collaboration as
possible. This isn’t about us versus them; this is about how we can get
more renewables on the grid faster to make a more resilient and affordable
system for customers.Saul Griffith, in his forthcoming book, “Electrify
<https://www.amazon.com/Electrify-Optimists-Playbook-Energy-Future-ebook/dp/B08SW9GPV8>,”
points out that it’s about three times as expensive to install rooftop
solar power in the U.S. as in Australia. How are we going to cut those
costs quickly?I’m a big fan of Saul and the work that he’s doing to help
show people how to transition our energy system away from fossil fuels. In
the U.S., we have a lot of what are called “soft costs.” We have more than
twenty thousand local jurisdictions across the country, and the majority of
them have different permitting requirements for installing solar and home
batteries. This is why I was thrilled to see that the Energy Secretary,
Jennifer Granholm, recently launched
<https://rmi.org/getting-more-solar-on-rooftops-across-the-country/?utm_campaign=organic&utm_content=1626471671&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter>
a
tool called SolarAPP+ <https://solarapp.nrel.gov/>, which is a free
software program that streamlines and significantly shortens the permitting
process, and will save several thousand dollars per solar install. Lynn
Jurich, the outgoing Sunrun C.E.O., has been heavily involved with
SolarAPP+, and the impact it will have is quite significant. We are
encouraging more and more cities and counties to sign up.Sunrun reported
record growth in installations this year. What will you need from the
government to keep toppling that record each year, and how much of that
amount is in the various infrastructure bills?I believe that the best way
to fight climate change is to fully electrify our homes, by outfitting them
with electric appliances and powering them with on-site renewable energy.
This is why Sunrun started installing batteries several years ago and,
recently, why we partnered with Ford to develop a bidirectional charger, so
that people can power their homes with clean energy day or night.The
clean-energy policies that Congress is considering via the
budget-reconciliation process represent a once-in-a-generation opportunity
for us to deploy the technologies we have today at a pace commensurate with
the climate challenge. The investment tax credit, in particular, has been
the most important federal policy to deploy solar, and a long-term
extension of it will help us deploy more solar and batteries faster. We
also hope to see “adder” credits for low-income Americans and residents of
disadvantaged communities. Finally, Senator Martin Heinrich has introduced
the Zero-Emission Homes Act, which would provide consumer rebates to help
decarbonize homes, where decisions are made that account for forty-two per
cent of our carbon emissions (according to Rewiring America
<https://content.rewiringamerica.org/fact-sheets/bringing-infrastructure-home/bringing-infrastructure-home-50-state-report-on-us-home-electrification.pdf>
).Climate SchoolProspects for a robust climate conclave in Glasgow this
November increased last week, when Greta Thunberg, who’d previously planned
to stay away, said
<https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/activist-greta-thunberg-now-plans-attend-un-climate-conference-scotland-2021-08-09/>
that
she will likely attend, now that U.N. officials have worked out a plan to
make sure that representatives from countries where vaccines are scarce
will be fully represented. “When these extreme weather events are
happening, many say, what will it take for people in power to start acting?
What are they waiting for?” Thunberg said, in an interview with Reuters.
“And it will take many things, but especially, it will take massive
pressure from the public.”Last week, “for the first time
<https://www.ktoo.org/2021/08/10/for-the-first-time-in-recorded-history-smoke-from-wildfires-reaches-the-north-pole/>
in
recorded history,” smoke from wildfires darkened the skies above the North
Pole. The blazes are in Siberia, and they are bigger
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/08/11/siberia-fires-russia-climate/>
than
all the other fires currently burning in the world combined.Last week, the
Canadian Minister of Environment and Climate Change explained
<https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/wilkinson-climate-report-1.6135502> that
the reason his country is expanding a pipeline to carry tar-sands oil to
the Pacific is because it needs the revenue to fight climate change. “What
we’re doing is saying it’s got to be part of the transition, but part of
the transition is being able to raise the revenues that enable you to
actually make the investments that are required to go there.” Got that?We’ve
reached the point where candidates are running for important jobs based
largely on their climate plans. Eric Orts, a professor at the Wharton
School, has joined the crowded Democratic primary field for the
Pennsylvania Senate seat that will be vacated by the Republican Pat Toomey,
and his climate platform
<https://medium.com/@ericorts/green-paper-on-the-climate-emergency-and-jobs-9bedac309bac>
couldn’t
be much more detailed or comprehensive (or much easier for others to copy
from as a template).ScoreboardEvery day, there are stories from around the
world about flood or fire—this one
<https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/waist-deep-flood-hits-cameroons-commercial-capital-after-torrential-rains-2021-08-12/?taid=61158852eb33530001735c4c&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=twitter>
is
about extensive flooding in Douala, the commercial capital of Cameroon. As
a local U.N. humanitarian representative told Reuters, “in West and Central
Africa the floods have doubled between 2015 and 2020.” When I hear stories
like this, I sometimes go and look up the carbon emissions of the people
involved, to remind myself of the rank injustice at work. So, for the
record, the average citizen of Cameroon emits 0.4 tons of carbon a year,
compared with 15.5 tons for the average American.David Sirota and Julia
Rock offer a fascinating insight
<https://www.dailyposter.com/were-going-the-wrong-way/> into the new census
data: Americans are continuing to move into precisely the places most at
risk from climate change, such as Phoenix (which saw an eleven-per-cent
increase in population) or the Gulf Coast of Texas, which combines heat
risk with the danger of flooding. Sirota and Rock write, “If climate change
were an enemy in a war, America is not fortifying our population in the
safest places—the country’s population is moving into the areas most at
risk of attack.”Amid the gloom surrounding the I.P.C.C. report, the
Australian climate activist Blair Palese offers ten reasons
<https://www.climateandcapitalmedia.com/the-climate-outlook-isnt-good-be-part-of-the-solution/>
for
at least a little hope. No. 4: “The EU’s recent announcement of the Carbon
Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM, or what’s often referred to as a carbon
border tax) is the first real financial mechanism that can be used to
punish climate laggards. The idea of green trading zones between climate
leaders that leaves laggards behind, sanctions, and, ultimately, FOMO: Fear
of missing out on the massive market opportunity of new low-carbon
technology are all important. Time to move from threatening with these
sticks to wielding them.”Mike Brune announced his retirement as the
executive director of the Sierra Club, the oldest and largest environmental
group in the country. The nonprofit has had three legendary leaders: John
Muir, who saved Yosemite but whose white-supremacist views were later
condemned by the organization; David Brower, who saved the Grand Canyon
<https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/lessons-from-the-fight-for-the-grand-canyon>;
and Brune, under whose leadership the Club helped shut down or block
<https://coal.sierraclub.org/> scores of coal-fired power plants. The
temptation for directors of big and powerful organizations is to play it
safe; Brune was always willing to stand up, even to Democratic
Administrations, and hence he played a key role in climate fights,
including the battle over the Keystone pipeline.

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