As people
in Oklahoma heroically dealt with their tornado disaster, observers were busy
pinning the blame for it on greedy mankind
by Sean Collins
by Sean Collins
A huge, 190 miles-per-hour tornado hit the suburbs of Oklahoma City on
Monday afternoon, killing 24, injuring hundreds, and leaving the area looking
like a wasteland. Survivors may have their lives, but not their homes, cars or
belongings.
People
across America were stunned to see such images of devastation. We watched
heroic rescue workers search under rubble to try to find people feared trapped.
It seemed especially cruel that the epicenter of the destruction was in Moore,
Oklahoma, whose people had suffered one of the most violent tornadoes not that
long ago, in 1999.
The
discussion in response to this natural disaster was revealing of a prevailing
doom-and-gloom tendency to expect the worst today, as well as a strange desire
to blame ourselves for the destruction brought about by nature.
The sense
from the media coverage was that Oklahoma showed that the US is exceptionally
vulnerable to, and unprepared for, violent weather disasters. Terms like
‘post-apocalyptic’ were used to describe the post-storm situation in Oklahoma.
Many seemed to jump to the conclusion that it was the worst tornado of all
time. The original report of the number dead on Monday was 91, but then we
learned by Tuesday that this was overstated, and the number was reduced to 24.
Of course, even one death is tragic, and the toll may rise over time, but it
seems somewhat odd that there was an expectation of much worse than actually
occurred.
Almost on
cue, environmentalists and politicians tried to pin the blame for the tornado
on human-caused climate change, and started calling for their favoured actions
to address it, such as cutting emissions (in other words, de-industrialisation).
California
Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer said to the
Senate floor after hearing of the Oklahoma tornado, ‘This is climate change. We
were warned about extreme weather, not just hot weather but extreme weather.’
Another Democrat, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, made similar comments, and later
apologised.
This has now
become the kneejerk response to any storm. After Hurricane Sandy, New York
state governor Andrew Cuomo said he told
President Obama it seemed like ‘we have a 100-year flood every two years now’.
He added: ‘These are extreme weather patterns. The frequency has been
increasing.’
Except they
haven’t been increasing - neither hurricanes nor tornadoes. ‘Tornado data does
not reveal any clear trends in tornado occurrence or deaths that would suggest
a clear tie to global warming, at least not yet’, writes Andrew
Freeman of Climate Central. Even Rajendra Pachauri, head of the UN-backed
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and not one to be shy about
promoting climate change fears, said of the
Oklahoma tornado: ‘One really cannot relate an event of this nature to
human-induced climate change. It’s just not possible. Scientifically, that’s
not valid.’