We need more Texas lawmakers to confront the reality of climate change

Re: Nov. 10 commentary, “We need resilient infrastructure and global climate plan now.”

Thanks to Rep. Zwiener for co-founding the Texas House Caucus on Climate, Environment and the Energy Industry and getting 30 members to join. We need such lawmakers to honestly look at the facts on climate change crisis and take action for health and well-being of their constituents.

The response of the Texas Legislature to the problems of the electric grid during and after the February winter storm has been nothing but disheartening. The loss of at least 210 lives and $80 billion in damages, and unbelievable suffering of Texans was not enough for the legislature to take strong action. The state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon has reported that Texas is vulnerable to a wide range of natural hazards, most of which are weather and climate events.

Yes, we need resilient infrastructure that will figure climate change as part of planning and that will reduce harmful emissions by transitioning to cleaner sources of energy.

Kalpana Sutaria

Austin American-Statesman

November 16, 2021

Lawmakers, listen to the scientists, and work to provide a reliable grid

Re: Sept. 12 article, “Texans pay millions for units that can restart power grid, but some went out during freeze.”

I am thankful that a total shutdown of the state’s power grid was averted. But it is deeply disturbing to find out that the ‘black start’ power plants were not fully prepared to back up the grid.

The Texas Legislature passed several laws during the 2021 regular session to address shortcomings at the power plants. The Public Utility Commission has to act in the best interest of all Texans and demand reliable weatherization standards for power plants, including the black start plants, from the Electrical Reliability Council of Texas, incorporating future scientific projections on climate change. ERCOT is neither transparent nor responsible. Is the Legislature going to impose penalties if power outages occur?

Power politics plays out.

Texas Legislature can help its people by saving lives and billions of dollars in economic damages by listening to climate scientists and have a reliable power grid.

Kalpana Sutaria

Austin American-Statesman

September 22, 2021

More fossil fuel plants will lead to more climate-related disasters

Re: July 7 article, “Abbott orders utility commission to shore up Texas power grid, targets renewable energy.”

Current headlines are full of reports of climate-related disasters — fires in California, 120-plus degree heat in Canada, and on and on.

Yet, Gov. Abbott calls for more natural gas and coal power plants, which will only make climate problems worse.

Past Republican governors, Bush and Perry, led the way for Texas’ becoming a leader in wind energy.

Clean energy is not just a Democratic thing. It’s a human thing.

Philip Russell

Austin American-Statesman

July 9, 2021

Bill puts price on polluting and returns the revenue

One of our six local members of the U.S. Congress, Rep. Lloyd Doggett, deserves a huge thank you for agreeing to co-sponsor House Bill 2307, the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act in the U.S. Congress.

This bill would put a price on polluting and return the revenue to American households, accomplishing two good things at once: curbing carbon emissions and putting more money in our wallets.

Thank you, Rep. Doggett! I hope we will now see one of the other five join in as well. What do you say, Reps. McCaul, Williams, Roy, Carter and Sessions?

Anna Graybeal

Austin American-Statesman

July 6, 2021

The monarch butterfly cab use our help to stay alive

Re: June 27 Article, ‘Monarch butterfly Texas license plates on sale’

Monarchs can certainly use help. Kudos to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department for creating a license plate.

There has been a steep decline in its population. The eastern North American population fell from 384 million per acre in 1996 to 14 million in 2013 . There was a slight uptick in 2019 , but still perilously low.

Their great migratory story is beautiful. During their eastern migration from Canada to Mexico, they pass through Texas. Inspired by the prominent climate scientist James Hansen, I planted milkweed. It was an amazing experience to see monarchs in my front yard. However, my milkweed plants died during the winter storm in February.

Scientists warn that the black and orange monarch butterflies are on the verge of extinction, and their disappearance is linked to climate change, pesticides and reduction of milkweed .

Plant milkweed, which is a main source of food for monarch caterpillars. Welcome monarchs to Texas and help conservation.

Kalpana Sutaria

Austin American-Statesman

June 2, 2021

Opinion: Looming Climate Disaster Is Obvious. What Are You Doing About It?

Each day the news is reporting extreme weather somewhere on the planet. This week it’s deadly heat in Portland, last month it was Antarctica icebergs larger than Rhode Island, and of course there was the polar vortex that knocked out the Texas power grid and killed hundreds of people in February. Global weirding is upon us, and that’s a very bad sign, because it is three or eight decades ahead of schedule, depending upon which science you study. It is very clear we have a catastrophic future that’s coming much faster than previously predicted.

For the past two years our climate committee in Windsor Park has been engaged in an outreach program visiting Austin neighborhood associations in the effort to build a coalition of neighborhoods requesting immediate action from elected officials. Every other month we livestream a virtual climate conversation with scientists like Katharine Hayhoe, and most recently the subject was ocean level rise in the Gulf. Each show is a different science, with different guests, and it is absolutely clear that everyone we engage is trying hard not to freak out. But the message is clear: All sciences tell us to reduce our carbon output immediately.

The problem is I don’t see much action. There is one hybrid car on my street, parked in my driveway. There are no electric cars. There is one house with solar. There are a few electric mowers. But most everyone is continuing to operate all these machines that we know are creating the problem, and there’s no incentive to do anything about it, from personal to governmental. In my opinion this is a failure of leadership.

The Biden White House is talking large numbers for a vague climate bill, but there’s absolutely no real discussion about a plan, and our window of opportunity is closing. After leading this climate committee and interviewing all these scientists and community leaders, it is clear to me that a massive change in our economy is required. I’ve seen a really good plan that says we need to mobilize 25 million Americans immediately, create a manufacturing base of the electrified future, and set it up in four years (just like we did in World War II). Once we retool and start building, by 2035 we will have constructed a majority of the renewable energy grid, and created 5 million permanent full-time jobs in the green industry, which will quite likely save the middle class.

Unfortunately, the only way we can have a real shot at staving off this looming disaster is for American leadership to wake up and take action, which I don’t see happening with any sense of urgency. There’s a reason we are cynical about Congress passing laws that actually help people or even come close to dealing with something as big as our climate crisis. So what can we do?

Windsor Park is but one of more than 80 organized neighborhood associations in Austin. Collectively we represent a majority of the registered voters in the city. Windsor Park is pitching the idea of an organized response to demand climate action from our elected officials. Imagine all of our congressional representatives receiving scores of climate resolutions from the neighborhoods they represent. Now imagine Austin evolving and thriving in the green future where there’s no pollution, no emissions. But we can’t get there by sitting on our hands and waiting for Congress. Please copy our climate resolution and have it passed by your neighborhood association, and then deliver it to all of your elected officials. Re-word it as you see fit, but get it done and join us in the collective demand for action.

If you are looking for ways to reduce your personal carbon footprint, visit the Windsor Park Carbon Shrinker page on Facebook. Our committee has built an easy to use database that will take your information on 10 different options (electric car, replace light bulbs, etc.) and automatically calculates your reduction of carbon. The database also collects the reductions per person and adds them together. We are hoping to reduce 100 million tons by the end of this year. Your participation is requested.

The end game for climate change is extinction. What are you doing about it?


Martin Luecke is the creator and chair of the Windsor Park Climate Crisis Committee. He is a past president of WPNA, and is currently a member of the Mueller Commission. Luecke has lived in Austin over four decades and raised two children in Windsor Park. He is a four time age group winner of the Barton Springs Diving Championship, and was head cheerleader at The University of Texas in 1984. Luecke is working on his first book titled, Luck and Timing: True Stories of a Small Town Boy.

We appreciate The Austin Chronicle for publishing this letter.

Let this environmental wake-up call sink in

Re: June 12 article, “UN: Climate and extinction crises are intertwined.”

When we are busy working, taking care of our families, being entertained, trying to make a buck, it is easy for us humans to overlook the harmful impacts we are having on Earth, harmful because they are going to hurt us directly and seriously.

We have received thousands of wake-up calls, such as the recent United Nations report, but we still haven’t woken up. The rapid heating of Earth, the decimation and rapidly increasing extinction rate of countless species, the despoiling of our oceans — relatively few of us want to hear about these things or take them seriously.

The most important things you can do to counteract them? One, educate yourself on how we are impacting the environment and what changes you can make in your own life to help mitigate them. Two, support only candidates with the most aggressive environmental protection agendas. It is essential we take action quickly.

Mark Warren

Austin American-Statesman

June 21, 2021

U.S. can lead in transition away from fossil fuels

Re: May 17 article, “The climate tree has fallen.” It is refreshing that the Biden administration’s Environmental Protection Agency is able to present facts: “The Earth’s climate is changing. Temperatures are rising, snow and rainfall patterns are shifting, and more extreme climate events … are already happening. Many of these observed changes are linked to the rising levels of carbon dioxides and other greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, caused by human activities.” All of us have experienced the effects of major disasters. Pollution kills 100,000 Americans every year and many others experience health impacts. I suffer from seasonal allergies which are getting worse.

We need to cut down emissions by pricing carbon and transitioning away

from fossil fuels. Our dependence on fossil fuel would require large amounts of carbon-free power that is lower priced than fossil fuels. Innovations in renewables and nuclear power are ongoing. The U.S. can lead the way, collaborate with nations, and invest in research and development of such power.

Kalpana Sutaria

Austin American-Statesman

May 22, 2021

State’s next looming health crisis is climate change

What kind of world do we want to live in, and what kind of world do we want our children to inherit? Do we want to be faced with recurrent and prolonged extreme heat waves, wildfires and hurricane seasons? Our climate crisis is not simply an environmental issue, it is a health crisis that has the potential to be more damaging than even our current pandemic in the long-term. As fellow Texans and medical students, we invite you to join us in supporting key bills currently in the Texas Legislature to fight climate change and protect our friends and families.

Texas summers are only getting hotter. Without further action to combat climate change, we could see almost two months of extreme heat each year in the next few decades, compared to fewer than 10 days now. This puts infants, young children, and people over 65 at risk of heat exhaustion and stroke. For the nearly 2 million Texans who have an underlying cardiovascular disease, heat waves make their hearts have to work much harder, which causes more emergency room visits, severe illnesses and deaths. Our homeless population and low-income communities who struggle to keep the A/C on will have to fight to stay alive during such overwhelming heat.

With these heat waves come megadroughts, which significantly increase the risk of wildfires, such as the massive 2011 Texas wildfire that burned almost four million acres. For the over 2 million Texans with COPD or asthma, wildfires severely exacerbate these and other respiratory diseases. Pregnant mothers exposed to wildfire smoke and air pollution have much higher rates of preterm birth, low-birth weight infants and stillbirths. If we don’t act, the terrifying red skies and black clouds we saw all over California last year may become common in Texas, too.

Heat and wildfires are not the only threats. Texas will be hit harder by hurricanes and flooding. The surface waters of the Gulf are warming up, and this heat creates an ideal environment for monstrous hurricanes. As we witnessed with Hurricane Harvey, these severe storms destroy homes and health care infrastructure, damage sanitation systems, and cause great physical and mental harm.

Let’s talk about how to fix this climate and health crisis. While we’re proud to be Texans, it is alarming that if Texas was a country, it’d be in the top 10 carbon emitters worldwide. We contribute heavily to climate change, and we are doing Texans a disservice if we say that the oil and gas industry provides quality jobs. The industry occupational fatality rate is seven times higher than that of general industry, and their employees are frequently exposed to dangerous chemicals and particulates that have major long-term health consequences such as lung disease and cancer. Transitioning to more sustainable energy sources translates into safer, more reliable jobs, which are healthier for employees and our communities.

The state legislature must recognize this urgent crisis and take long-overdue action to protect our beautiful state and its people. There are specific steps we can take. The Texas Legislature needs to pass HCR 22, HB 1044, SB 243 and other legislation to address climate change. HCR 22 and HB 1044 would be instrumental in setting the stage for future sensible, nonpartisan legislation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to these extreme weather events. SB 243 will improve energy efficiency, lowering demand on the electrical grid while providing weatherization to people’s homes and businesses. These are just a few of many critical bills that will safeguard our future. Please contact your state legislators today and ask them to support these bills. Let’s make sure our kids and grandkids will have a state and planet worth living in.

Hancock and Tee are medical students at Dell Medical School at UT-Austin and executive board members of the school’s Environmental Health Interest Group.

Canaan Hancock and Michael Tee

Austin American-Statesman

April 28, 2021

> LTE Under Consideration: We need our legislators to lead the way on proposed legislation that addresses climate change

I’m frustrated at the slow progress on environmental issues by the Texas legislature. The energy industries in Texas can achieve a future that will provide a healthy environment and vibrant economy. We need our legislators to lead the way with bipartisan forbearance and act on proposed legislation that addresses climate change.

As a good first step, leaders in both parties should start a conversation about climate change as it relates to the economy of Texas. The Texas Environmental and Economic Stewardship Resolution (HCR 22) provides that opportunity. The resolution encourages consideration of both the environment and the economy in new projects in Texas. Passage of HCR 22 would be a clear signal that Texas is ready to lead our energy future with good jobs and clean air for all. The Environmental Regulation Committee of the 117th Legislature should schedule a hearing on HCR 22 as soon as possible.

Neilé Edens, PhD
Grasstops Coordinator, Citizens’ Climate Lobby

Submitted to the Austin American-Statesman

April 2021