DEAR READERS: Climate change is decimating aquatic and terrestrial wildlife around the world, along with vulnerable human communities, many of which were already impoverished. And things are getting worse under the Trump administration.
Advertisement
Multiple federal agencies have already been directed to remove or downgrade references to climate change from their websites and internal communications. On April 8, Trump signed a series of executive orders using the erroneous banner of a "national emergency" to increase coal production, mining exploration on federal lands and a two-year exemption on reducing emissions of toxic chemicals like arsenic, benzene and mercury.
This action was justified to fuel data centers for AI and cryptocurrency transactions (including Trump’s World Liberty Financial cryptocurrency business). A single bitcoin transaction consumes roughly 699 kilowatt-hours of electricity, which is about 24 days’ worth of energy for an average U.S. household. Economic and environmental illiteracy evidently go hand in hand.
The idea of increasing coal production hits quite close to home for me: I grew up in the coal mining (and burning) county of Lancashire in the north of England. During the Great Smog of 1952 in London, an estimated 12,000 people died due to the effects of the thick, toxic, burned-coal smog. I was not without a cold, sinus inflammation or infection until my parents moved into the less polluted rural county of Derbyshire.
The Trump administration has also ordered half of the national forests managed by the U.S. Forest Service to be opened for logging to boost timber production. This initiative is counterproductive. We need more trees to absorb heat-trapping carbon dioxide, now reaching peak levels as we burn more fossil fuels and lose forests from drought-sparked fires.
Global warming is causing fossil methane and carbon dioxide to be released from melting Arctic permafrost. This natural source of greenhouse gases calls on us to reduce anthropogenic sources to avoid a catastrophic planetary climatic tipping point.
The acceleration of climate change, coupled with the declining quality of air and water, will harm the quality of life for generations to come -- a sacrifice economically justified by the spiritually corrupted politics of extraction and extinction. Trump’s push to encourage deep-sea mining to stockpile critical minerals is also ill advised without environmental impact assessments and international regulatory accords.
While the gulf between rich and poor expands, many nations are now spending trillions on military defense, weapons of mass destruction, cybersecurity and espionage rather than on addressing poverty, hunger, disease and environmental protection.
These nihilistic cycles, fostered by fear- and greed-driven authoritarian regimes, can be broken by an informed public and by dedicated nonprofit organizations. These include the Natural Resources Defense Council, Greenpeace, the Nature Conservancy, the Environmental Working Group, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Earthjustice and the Alaska Wilderness League.
We must all embrace our existential responsibilities for nature, animals and each other, as I document in my new book, “One Health.” State and federal legislators must wake up from the numbing chaos of this era and make amends.
(Send all mail to animaldocfox@gmail.com or to Dr. Michael Fox in care of Andrews McMeel Syndication, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. The volume of mail received prohibits personal replies, but questions and comments of general interest will be discussed in future columns.
Visit Dr. Fox’s website at DrFoxOneHealth.com.)