Two years ago, climate scientist and activist Dr Peter Kalmus moved his family away from Los Angeles because as California’s climate kept growing drier and hotter, he was afraid that his much loved, indeed idyllic sounding, neighbourhood would burn. He had lived in Altadena for 14 years.
Now, from his new home in North Carolina, he has had the deeply upsetting experience of watching Altadena razed, as climate-driven wildfires caused death, destroyed homes and ruined livelihoods.
Kalmus tells In the News that even he – who has spent his career warning about the deadly impact of our fossil fuel dependence – didn’t expect fires of this scale. It is he says proof that climate models which consistently predict the sort of temperatures that will alter life on earth, have tended to err on the side of optimism.
Our inability – in a world shaped by the interests of big business, billionaires and the fossil fuel industry – to grasp the threat caused by carbon emissions, means he says that nowhere is safe from unpredictable, and even devastating weather events. The LA fires won’t be the last.
Trump rejects US intelligence report finding strikes on Iran did not destroy two nuclear sites
‘Unbelievably cynical’: farmers accuse vegan food producers of ‘hijacking’ sausage and burger labels
Man arrested over suspected feud-related hit and run in Balbriggan
Most Dublin Airport passengers to be allowed keep up to 100ml of liquids in carry-on bags under imminent ruling
Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon and John Casey.