[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 167 (Tuesday, November 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7888-S7890]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLIMATE CHANGE
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, it is my habit to give my ``Time to
Wake Up'' speeches once a week when the Senate is in session. It is
also a practice of mine to go to other States--particularly States that
have Republican Senators--to look at what is happening in the States
and get a sense of where the local universities and the local experts
are with respect to climate change. My last visit was to Ohio. I have
also been to New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,
Florida, Tennessee, and Iowa. The thing that is common across all of
those trips is that there is no denying climate change in those States.
The denial is the function of this building, and it is the function of
the wall of money the fossil fuel industry has erected around this
building. But pick a State university in the country and go there, and
we find there is simply not climate denial.
I am joined today by my friend Sherrod Brown, Ohio's senior Senator,
who was kind enough to accompany me on the trip--on several parts of
it, anyway. We went to Cleveland. We had a couple of meetings there
together. Another one of my visits was to Lake Erie, which got
clobbered by the cyanotic bacteria that shut down Toledo's water
system, which is also climate change-related.
Let me yield to the Senator from Ohio for a few moments, and then we
can talk about Cleveland and the lake.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I thank Senator Whitehouse.
When I introduced Senator Whitehouse to the mayor of Cleveland and to
a number of experts in Cleveland, from public health officials, to wind
energy entrepreneurs, to community groups to whom climate change
matters so much, I introduced him as probably--not just probably--there
is no person in the Senate who has done a better job of focusing public
attention on the threats of climate change and what it means to our way
of life and what it means to our country. I thank Senator Whitehouse
for that.
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I want to point to what happened in Toledo, OH, in 2011. This green
color in this picture is algae bloom. This is a small boat that is
making its way through the algae bloom.
This wasn't even the year Toledo residents lost their water supply.
In 2014--last August, 15 months ago--algae blooms were so serious in
Lake Erie and in the western basin--Toledo is in the western basin of
Lake Erie, Cleveland is sort of central, and then Ashtabula and Erie,
PA, are in the eastern basin of Lake Erie. Again, this is not the most
serious situation, although the algae bloom is so overwhelming here.
This green is all algae bloom. The lake actually should be the color--
where you can see dark blue here, that is normally the color of the
lake. We can see the wake of the boat, and that is the normal color of
the lake, as the boat plowed through the algae bloom.
The problem with Lake Erie is that it is the most vulnerable lake
because it is the shallowest lake in the western basin of Lake Erie. In
this part of Lake Erie, it is only 30 feet deep. It is fed by the
Maumee River, which is the largest tributary of any river into any of
the five Great Lakes. Keep in mind that it is 30 feet deep here, fed by
farmland and commercial activity and industry and homeowners--greater
Toledo in northwest Ohio. Contrast that with Lake Superior. It is 30
feet deep here, and Lake Superior is 600 feet deep on average. And Lake
Superior mostly drains forests, so we can see why Cleveland and Toledo
are so vulnerable to climate change and so vulnerable to pollution and
all that has happened with the algae blooms.
People in Toledo--500,000 people lost their drinking water for 2\1/2\
days. People were great, stepping up from all over southern Michigan,
eastern Indiana, and northwest Ohio to ship in water for people. But it
made such a--it says to us that climate change isn't the only reason
this happened, but it is clearly happening. We are seeing this algae
bloom worse and worse and worse in hot weather.
One other thing about this Great Lake. Lake Erie is only 2 percent of
all of the Great Lakes' water--five Great Lakes. Lake Erie is only 2
percent of all the Great Lakes' water because it is shallow and its
surface areas are not as big as the others. Fifty percent of the fish
of all of the Great Lakes are in Lake Erie because fish will produce
and will prosper in shallower, warmer water, but the water was too warm
because of climate change and all of the things that came out of that.
In this meeting we had with Dr. Aparna Bole--a pediatric specialist
at Cleveland's University Hospital--she talked about asthma rates. We
heard from others too.
I will turn it back to Senator Whitehouse and ask him what he learned
from these meetings. He was not just in meetings with people in
Cleveland learning about what climate change means there, he also went
to the Stone Lab and he can tell us about that. Then he had an amazing
meeting at Ohio State University with some of America's amazing climate
scientists. I will kick it back to Senator Whitehouse and again thank
him for traveling the country every single week and looking for places
where climate change has done the most damage in terms that people can
understand. His leadership is so important.
I thank Senator Whitehouse for the work he has done, and I am so
grateful he came to the city of Cleveland and joined us.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Well, I was very happy to join the Senator. I thought
Frank Jackson was extremely impressive on this subject. He pointed out
that there are times in life when we simply have to go to the future,
and if you decide to hang on to the past, you will fail as a result of
missing that curve. He said that the business community in Cleveland
was really beginning to get that, beginning to take it on. So he has
led with a Cleveland Climate Action Plan, which is one of the best ones
in the country.
We went to a great place where they are growing lettuce
hydroponically, 3, 4 acres in an old building, under an open glass
ceiling. They are using captured rain water; they are recycling it. The
people there have jobs that pay well. They were the owners of the
project and they were really vested in it. Wasn't the morale of the
people working there phenomenal? It was terrific.
Dr. Aparna Bole, whom Senator Brown mentioned, was very in tune to
what was happening in minority communities as a result of climate
change from asthma, from heat. She is seeing it with her young
patients. She was wonderful, talking about that. At this point, because
of toxic ground level ozone and ragweed being triggers for asthma
attacks--she has seen so much of that. She said that more than one in
five African-American kids in Cleveland has asthma, and she connects it
to what is happening in climate change.
Of course, we understand that in Rhode Island because we have the
same bad air days where we have to have kids stay indoors and elderly
people stay indoors, all because of the air coming from the Midwest
that has been fouled by these coal-burning powerplants.
Out on Lake Erie I met with some of the scientists from Stone Labs
and a couple of the lifelong fishing captains who had been out there on
the lake. Here are some of the water samples we took while we were out.
It is clean now--this is what the water should look like--but back
before, when the climate change-driven rain bursts were flooding Lake
Erie with phosphorus from the farms in the watershed, there was an
explosion of cyanotic bacteria to the point where these guys said
driving their boats wasn't like driving through water, it was like
driving through pudding, and the wake would slurp over instead of
turning the way a regular boat's wake would. One of them had been doing
this for 35 years and he said: I don't know this lake any longer. I
don't know where the fish are going to be. For 35 years I have fished
this lake, and now it is like a stranger to me because of all these
changes that are happening.
That is exactly what my Rhode Island fishermen are telling me, too,
about Narragansett Bay and Rhode Island Sound. We are here with the
Senator from Massachusetts. ``Sheldon, it is getting weird out there.
Sheldon, this is not my grandfather's ocean.'' We have some
responsibilities to pay attention to these people and to listen to
them.
One of the most impressive parts of the trip was this at Ohio State.
Ohio State is host to the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center named
after the famous polar explorer Admiral Byrd. These two scientists,
Ellen Mosley-Thompson and Lonnie Thompson, have spent their lives
traveling all over the planet going to these incredible, faraway
places--the North Pole, the South Pole, to the Greenland icecap, going
to glaciers high in Peru, going to glaciers in the faraway mountains of
China. They drill down and take a core sample out of the glacier and
get hundreds of thousands of years of data in that core sample.
Then there you are on the top of a glacier in Peru or China, and you
have to figure out how to get this core sample back to Ohio--and it has
to stay frozen the whole time. So they had this huge logistical
challenge. They conquered all of that. They are two amazing people.
These are all the core samples from glaciers all around the globe.
Some of them, because of the way climate has dissipated the glaciers,
where they drilled the core sample the glacier doesn't exist anymore.
It is the last record of gone glaciers.
Here is a picture they had. This is the same site. On this side is a
picture of the glacier. You can see striations from the seasons and
years going by, and they took this picture from the same place. You can
see how the glacier used to be right in front of them and now this
glacier is off in the distance. It has moved back as the climate has
warmed.
They gave me this. This is a piece of plant matter. You can hardly
see it. It is plants that were unearthed as the glacier moved back, and
they can date them. Those plants were last out 6,626 years ago, when a
snow covered those plants. Snow piled on to snow and it was buried
under the glacier. It stayed and it stayed, and thousands of years went
by. Then, after thousands of years had gone by, Jesus came and walked
the Earth, and then thousands more years came by, and now the glaciers
are melting so fast that here it is. You can look, and you can still
see the leaves. It is squashed and old, but it hasn't decomposed
because of the way
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it was preserved under the glacier that is going away now. In this
laboratory they have this incredible treasure. You can go in and you
can find air that was on this planet when Jesus walked the Earth, and
it is still preserved just the way it was in the ice. You can find dust
from dust storms that were written about in Egyptian hieroglyphics, and
there is the actual dust held in the ice. This is the record that the
climate science is based on, and it truly is a marvel.
The last thing I will mention is that we also stopped by the Ohio
State Center for Automotive Research. Here is a brandnew Camaro in the
background. They work with GM to get cars brand-spanking-new, a high-
performance American Camaro. These students are going to take it apart
and put it back together so it runs cheaper, faster, and with less
fuel. They are going to make a hybrid Camaro with the same level of
performance, and it is really very impressive what they are doing. They
know climate change is here. That is why they are doing this stuff.
I will close out because I have other Senators waiting, but I thank
Senator Brown for taking me around Cleveland, meeting all the people we
did, and taking me on those visits. I thank the folks at Ohio State.
Stone Labs out on Lake Erie is an Ohio State facility. The Byrd Polar
and Climate Research Center is an Ohio State facility. I met with the
John Glenn Institute folks at Ohio State University.
Look, if you are a Buckeye fan and you are listening, pay attention
to what Ohio University says about climate change. Don't listen to the
fossil fuel phonies. Listen to what your home State university says.
These guys are deadly serious. They know it is real. I don't think
there is a home State university in this country that is denying
climate change, and yet this body is stuck in denial. It has nothing to
do with the facts; otherwise the home State universities would say
something different. You can't go home and root for the Buckeyes on the
weekend and then come here and deny climate change and pretend you are
being true to your home State university. I don't care what your home
State is--Iowa, Oklahoma, Florida, Georgia--you name it. Go to the big
State universities. They understand that climate change is real.
What prevents us from acting isn't information, it is the wall of
special influence money that the fossil fuel industry has built around
this place, and it is time we woke up and got on with our business. So
I will close with that.
I am grateful for the people in Ohio who showed me around,
particularly to Dave Spangler and Paul Pacholski, lifelong charter boat
captains. They make their living out on Lake Erie. They know what it is
like out there, and they know what climate change is doing to their
beloved lake and their beloved way of life.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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