I’m a climate scientist and my house in LA burned down. My work has never been more real
Benjamin
Hamlington
I feel like
I am safe in saying that we are not thriving on our changing planet – and we
will not in the coming decades
Wed 15 Jan
2025 11.07 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/15/la-california-fires-climate-science
My house in
Altadena burned down in the wildfires on Wednesday. It all happened quickly. On
Tuesday around 7pm, my wife and daughters went to a hotel as a precaution. I
left the house with the dogs when the mandatory evacuation order came in around
3am. As best as I can put the timeline together, our home burned down around
the same time that the sun came up, and I was able to drive in and see the
damage around 2pm.
Neighbors
that went in after said it looked like a “war zone”. I have never been in a war
zone thankfully, but I didn’t think so. There was nothing violent or chaotic
about it. No one stopped me from driving in. There were no sirens. I stood
alone – no one else around – in front of my house that was at that point just a
fireplace and chimney. The house across the street was about halfway done with
burning down, and the house behind ours had just started to burn.
There were
no attempts to fight any of it – no fire trucks that I saw. It was quiet and
all very final. I don’t mean to minimize the devastation and loss that has been
experienced by so many by describing it as peaceful, but it was a moment that
will leave a mark on me not because of the extent of destruction but because of
the calmness that I felt and experienced in the middle of it.
My house is
one of many that burned down. I can see that everyone is dealing with it in
very different ways and at very different paces. I don’t have a special or
unique perspective to share, mostly because the experience of the past 24 hours
is not unique or special. These events – often much more devastating in terms
of loss of life than this one – are happening everywhere and more often with
every passing year. As a climate scientist looking at these events from a
distance, there can be a reaction to nod and say: “Yes, this is what we expect
to unfold and what our science shows.” That’s true, of course. This event, for
me, has destroyed any boundary between my work and the rest of my life, my
family, my friends. It causes me to reflect on whether the words we frequently
use to talk about climate change are consistent with what I’d want to hear in
this moment. I haven’t really had time to sit down and pause until right now,
and I just have one reflection to share.
Recently at
work, I’ve been working with others to consider updates to an important
guidance document for Nasa written in 2017 titled: Thriving on Our Changing
Planet: A Decadal Strategy for Earth Observation from Space. It doesn’t really
matter what the document is right now, but there have been discussions on how
the framing should shift several years on. I feel like I am safe in saying that
we are not thriving on our changing planet. And we will not thrive on our
changing planet in the coming decades. But I’m not filled with despair or
fatigue or ready to give up trying to help.
Even if
thriving isn’t possible (which I really don’t think it is), protecting what is
most important to us, supporting vulnerable communities across the globe, and
ensuring a decent life for our kids can be possible and is worth working
towards as best as we can. We can be both realistic and hopeful of finding a
positive solution – one that doesn’t accomplish everything, maybe, but one that
does enough.
My kids have
now had their pre-school flooded by a hurricane and their house burned down by
a wildfire in elementary school (OK, maybe I’m both a bad parent and a bad
climate scientist … ). Hopefully they will not be so directly impacted, but the
occurrence of these events will be the reality of their generation for quite a
while. But maybe when they are my age, they’ll at least see a solution has been
put into place and there is greater belief that we will be able to protect what
is important to us.
Many of you
reading this are colleagues of mine working towards similar objectives. Thanks
for all the work you do – it is important and matters. I say that not just in
my work capacity, but also as a regular person dealing with something
challenging right now.
Benjamin
Hamlington is a research scientist at Nasa Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a team
lead at Nasa Sea Level Change team
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