
www.wesa.fm
10 August 2018
As more storms roll in, how will power companies keep the lights on?
When the power goes out, calls to local utility companies come flooding in from people like Joan Petrillo, manager of Martindale's Natural Market.
When the power goes out, calls to local utility companies come flooding in from people like Joan Petrillo, manager of Martindale's Natural Market.
A once-vital NASA climate lab perched above Manhattan’s Tom’s Restaurant will shut down at the end of May, displacing scientists and reflecting the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle federal climate research.
In short:
Key quote:
“They are trying to kill the messenger with the bad news, it’s crazy.”
— Dr. James Hansen, former director of GISS
Why this matters:
Climate science doesn’t happen in a vacuum — it needs infrastructure, continuity, and institutional support. GISS has played a critical role in shaping our understanding of global warming, from building the first climate models to documenting the accelerating pace of planetary heating. Its closure threatens not just a symbolic center of climate research, but the very mechanisms by which we monitor and respond to environmental change. Shuttering this lab sends a message that scientific expertise, especially in politically sensitive areas like climate, can be sidelined. The lab’s closure isn’t happening in isolation — it echoes a broader pattern of devaluing federal science, from vaccine research to weather forecasting.
Related: Push to privatize NASA and NOAA climate research sparks backlash from Maryland lawmakers
Republicans in the Senate used a controversial procedural tactic to advance legislation that would block California from enforcing its planned ban on new gasoline-powered vehicle sales by 2035, challenging both state environmental authority and longstanding Senate rules.
In short:
Key quote:
“In order to do the bidding of the fossil fuel industry, Republicans will erode away at the Senate and undermine this institution they claim to care about.”
— Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York
Why this matters:
California’s aggressive clean air policies have long set the pace for national vehicle emissions standards. Nearly a dozen other states follow its lead, making its rules de facto national benchmarks. Blocking California’s authority would not only reshape how climate policy is made in the U.S., but could also stall the transition away from fossil fuels in the transportation sector—one of the nation’s biggest sources of greenhouse gas emissions.
Learn more: Why some House Democrats helped block California’s 2035 gas car ban
A bitter Senate hearing erupted into shouting as U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin defended sweeping grant cuts and environmental rollbacks under President Trump, sparring with Democrats over transparency and health impacts.
In short:
Key quote:
“You could give a rat’s ass about how much cancer your agency causes.”
— Adam Schiff, U.S. Representative from California
Why this matters:
The EPA has historically played a central role in safeguarding clean air and water, but recent moves to scale back oversight and funding for pollution prevention have triggered alarm among public health advocates. Grants targeting lead contamination, for example, help prevent irreversible brain damage in children. Similarly, cuts to air quality monitoring or enforcement can lead to higher exposure to known carcinogens, increasing cancer rates, especially in urban and industrial areas. When elected officials downplay these risks or suggest that budget cuts won’t affect health, they ignore decades of scientific evidence linking environmental toxins to serious illnesses.
Read more: EPA freezes environmental justice grants as Zeldin defends budget cuts before Congress
A California company’s bid to mine the seafloor near American Samoa gained momentum after the U.S. Interior Department agreed to review its proposal following a Trump administration order to fast-track seabed mining.
In short:
Key quote:
“As soon as the executive order came out, that very much directed the different groups to accelerate and prioritize deep-sea mining.”
— Oliver Gunasekara, CEO of Impossible Metals
Why this matters:
Deep-sea mining offers access to minerals like cobalt, nickel, and manganese — critical for electric vehicles, renewable energy, and defense technologies — but at potentially high environmental costs. These ecosystems, found thousands of feet below the ocean’s surface, remain largely unexplored and may host ancient life forms uniquely adapted to extreme pressure and darkness. Disrupting the seabed to extract mineral nodules could irreversibly damage fragile habitats and threaten species not yet studied by science. Moreover, sediment plumes and noise pollution from mining operations may ripple through the marine food chain.
While most countries await international consensus through the United Nations-backed International Seabed Authority, the U.S. — which never ratified the Law of the Sea treaty — is pushing ahead unilaterally. American Samoa, with limited political representation and a history of environmental vulnerability, stands at the intersection of global power, corporate ambition, and Indigenous rights.
Related: Mining firm defies global regulator in bid to extract metals from Pacific seabed
A deadly tornado system ravaged Black neighborhoods in St. Louis, exposing long-standing failures in emergency alert infrastructure and the federal government’s disaster response.
In short:
Key quote:
“We were giving people water not because they didn’t have pipes, but because they couldn’t afford it before the tornado.”
— Antoine White, rapper and organizer with HandsUp United
Why this matters:
Tornadoes don’t discriminate, but the systems meant to protect people from them often do. When a tornado ripped through St. Louis, it revealed how decades of racial segregation, underinvestment, and neglect put Black neighborhoods at greater risk. In places like North City, where emergency sirens failed and internet access is scarce, residents had no warning. The federal response was slow to arrive, just weeks after the government slashed funding designed to build safer infrastructure in vulnerable communities. These are not isolated incidents. Studies show that Black counties receive significantly less disaster preparedness funding, face higher insurance premiums, and suffer more damage during storms — even when weather conditions are identical. As climate change intensifies weather extremes, the disparity in who gets help and who doesn’t is widening.
Related: Cuts to federal weather staffing are leaving communities vulnerable to tornadoes
Strong climate action, not delay, is the key to stabilizing a global economy rocked by droughts, hunger, and rising prices, the UN’s top climate official said this week.
In short:
Key quote:
“Famine is back, and the role of global heating cannot be ignored.”
— Simon Stiell, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
Why this matters:
Climate-driven disruptions to trade, food supply, and infrastructure are no longer distant warnings — they’re reshaping the global economy now. The UN climate chief’s comments underscore how worsening droughts, like those hitting the Panama Canal choke off supply chains and inflate food prices, pushing millions toward hunger. Poorer nations, which have contributed least to global warming, are hit hardest and are struggling to build resilience without sufficient international help. Climate finance was designed to address this injustice, but promises made by wealthy countries are evaporating under new political leadership and shrinking aid budgets.
Learn more: Global economic losses from climate change may be far worse than predicted, new study warns
Salmon are moving into lakes and streams newly formed by melting glaciers in Alaska and British Columbia, even as mining firms rush to exploit mineral-rich lands newly exposed by retreating ice.
In short:
Key quote:
Are critical minerals “more critical than our lives? More critical than the fish?”
— Richard Peterson, president of the Tlingit and Haida government
Why this matters:
The race for minerals and the reshaping of ecosystems due to melting glaciers is a collision of environmental consequence and economic ambition. Salmon, already facing pressures from warming seas and dwindling freshwater flows, may find refuge in glacial waters that are now becoming more hospitable as ice recedes. But these same landscapes are becoming targets for mining companies lured by copper and gold, often aided by government subsidies. For Indigenous communities in Alaska and Canada, this trade-off is especially fraught: Salmon are both a vital food source and a cultural touchstone. As exploration moves into sensitive watersheds, calls are growing for stricter regulations, cross-border agreements, and Indigenous consent. Yet with glacial landscapes transforming faster than environmental policies can adapt, the outcome could determine whether these new salmon habitats become ecological lifelines or casualties of industrial expansion.
One facility has emitted cancer-causing chemicals into waterways at levels up to 520% higher than legal limits.
“They're terrorizing these scientists because they want to keep them silent.”
"The reality is, we are not exposed to one chemical at a time.”
A new report assesses the administration’s progress and makes new recommendations
“We cannot stand by and allow this to happen. We need to hold this administration accountable.”
“The chemical black box” that blankets wildfire-impacted areas is increasingly under scrutiny.