Jim Cason, the GOP mayor of Coral Gables, Florida, wants us to talk about climate change:
"'We're looking to a future where we're going to be underwater, a great portion of South Florida,' Cason said. 'For all of us down here, this is really not a partisan issue. We see it. We see the octopus in the room, not the elephant.'" (E&E News)
An octopus in the room? It's a striking image. If you're wondering what prompted that unusual metaphor, Rob Verchick and I discussed the background in a recent op-ed in the Miami Herald:
"Last month, the Herald reported that a live octopus had been found in a flooded parking garage at Miami's Mirador 1000 condominium complex, along with a number of fish. This was, to say the least, a surprise...
"What was an octopus doing in a parking garage? Well, these luxury condos are near the ocean, as is the parking facility and all of its drainage pipes. Those pipes, which feed runoff into the ocean, used to be well above the water's surface. But sea level is rising, and so the pipes are flooding more during very high tides. No one thought to install an octopus screen on the drain's opening."
Mayor Cason's view of climate change is especially noteworthy because he's not just your average local official. Before he became a mayor, he served as ambassador to Paraguay under President George W. Bush. But he's not alone. As Rob and I reported in our op-ed., local officials in South Florida of both parties are banding together to discuss how to adapt to rising seas. And in many cases, they're also calling for cuts in carbon emissions. And research shows that conservatives are more open to considering adaptation than mitigation, so this is a good way to open the conversation.
As Mayor Cason realized, "the octopus" is an especially apt image for talking about sea level rise because it's easy to imagine the rising seas converting your living room into an aquarium. But, to continue the metaphor, the octopus of climate change has many arms, not just sea level rise. There's also drought, flooding, and heatwaves, for example.
The octopus is also an apt image because of the weirdness of finding an octopus swimming around a parking garage. And freak events – many of them a lot more serious than this – are going to increase with climate change. We're going to see a lot more record-breaking droughts, heatwaves, and floods. Not to mention animals and plants unexpectedly showing up in new places. Some of those, like disease-carrying mosquitoes, won't be nearly as innocuous or funny as the parking garage octopus.
So forget about that tired old elephant. Let's talk about the octopus in the room, before it gets out of the parking garage and gets to your living room.
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Daniel Farber | December 19, 2016
Jim Cason, the GOP mayor of Coral Gables, Florida, wants us to talk about climate change: “‘We’re looking to a future where we’re going to be underwater, a great portion of South Florida,’ Cason said. ‘For all of us down here, this is really not a partisan issue. We see it. We see the octopus in the […]
Joseph Tomain | December 15, 2016
As President-elect Donald Trump continues to shape his cabinet, we are seeing plenty of indications of how agencies like the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and even the State Department will approach energy and environmental policy. Trump’s stated policy preferences and those of his nominees threaten to upend decades of progress toward […]
Rena Steinzor | December 14, 2016
A burgeoning and little-regulated private industry that specially mixes drugs at so-called compounding pharmacies poses a public-health hazard that the Trump administration is about to make a whole lot worse. An earlier version of this story appeared in The American Prospect. President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to eliminate 70 to 80 percent of all federal […]
Brian Gumm | December 13, 2016
President-Elect Donald Trump has selected Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt as his Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-MT) as his Interior Secretary, and former Texas governor Rick Perry as his Energy Secretary. The Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) has released statements on the picks. Robert Glicksman, CPR Board Member, on Department […]
Joel A. Mintz | December 13, 2016
Efficient, professional law enforcement is a cornerstone of effective and responsible environmental protection. It is the cop on the environmental beat. While some regulated firms will likely continue to comply with environmental requirements in the absence of vigorous, evenhanded enforcement, other companies will certainly proceed to pollute America’s air, water, and land with reckless arrogance. […]
Joseph Tomain | December 12, 2016
This blog post is based on the Introduction to my forthcoming book, Clean Power Politics: The Democratization of Energy (Cambridge University Press, 2017). One year ago, 195 nations met in Paris and signed what has been hailed as an historic climate agreement.1 To date, 116 parties have ratified the convention, and it went into force […]
Matthew Freeman | December 9, 2016
In a statement Wednesday responding to President-elect Trump’s choice of climate change denier Scott Pruitt to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, CPR President Robert Verchick said that the choice was “a clear indication that the administration plans a full-throated assault on environmental protections.” In an op-ed in The New York Times this morning, CPR Member […]
Evan Isaacson | December 8, 2016
Over the last couple of months, a pair of actions taken by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) demonstrate the glacial pace of federal stormwater management policy under the Clean Water Act. In October, EPA rejected a series of petitions by a group of environmental organizations to expand regulatory protections for certain urban waterways. Then […]
Alice Kaswan | December 5, 2016
Environmentalists are understandably wringing their hands over the likely post-election demise of the Clean Power Plan, the Obama administration’s rule to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, which are the nation’s single biggest source of carbon emissions. But, with or without the Clean Power Plan (the Plan), the states hold the cards to a […]