2020 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #15
Posted on 11 April 2020 by John Hartz
Editor's Choice
Jennifer Nuzzo: “We’re Definitely Not Overreacting” to COVID-19
Johns Hopkins epidemiologist and infectious disease expert Jennifer Nuzzo on why vaccines aren’t the answer, how COVID-19 is unique, and how to stay safe.
We are living in strange times. The streets and highways that run through busy cities around the world are uncharacteristically empty. Schools are closed. Storefronts are boarded up. Many people are just trying to figure out how to survive the COVID-19 pandemic. Preparation is key, says epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo. But that doesn’t mean stockpiling paper goods and cleaning supplies. Each country needs to be prepared, and it is now clear that many were not.
Nuzzo’s work at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security has focused on pandemics and outbreaks. Less than three months before the earliest reported case of humans infected with COVID-19, Nuzzo and her colleagues published a WHO/World Bank-commissioned report about a “high-impact respiratory pathogen” that “would likely have significant public health, economic, social, and political consequences.” What we’re experiencing now, she says, exceeds “some of the grimmest expectations” highlighted in that report.
Still, Nuzzo sees a light at the end of the coronavirus tunnel. In our interview, she explained why vaccines aren’t the answer, how the novel coronavirus is unique, and what we can do to keep ourselves healthy. A supporter of social distancing, Nuzzo spoke to me from the protection of her home in Maryland, where she, like many of us, is balancing remote work with homeschooling two young kids.
Jennifer Nuzzo: “We’re Definitely Not Overreacting” to COVID-19 by Yvonne Bang, JSTOR Daily, Apr 6, 2020
Click here to access the entire article.
Articles Linked to on Facebook
Sun, Apr 5, 2020
- A classic 'Twilight Zone' episode warns us how not to behave during a pandemic by& Blake, CNN, Apr 4, 2020
- Rescuing the Great Barrier Reef: how much can be saved, and how can we do it? by Graham Readfearn, Environmental Investigations, Guardian Australia, Apr 4, 2020
- Aware, confused, leaderless: How Irish people feel about climate change now by Ian McShane, Life & Style, Irish Times, Apr 4, 2020
- Big Oil is using the coronavirus pandemic to push through the Keystone XL pipeline, Opinion by Bill McKibben, Comment is Free, Guardian, Apr 5, 2020
- Prepare or Panic: URI Professor's Advice for Addressing a Global Pandemic and the Climate Crisis by Tim Faulkner, ecoRI News (Rhode Island), Apr 4, 2020
- Under Cover of Pandemic, Fossil Fuel Interests Unleash Lobbying Frenzy by Dana Drugmand, DeSmog, Apr 2, 2020
Mon, Apr 6, 2020
- How Coronavirus Could Help Us Fight Climate Change: Lessons From The Pandemic by David Vetter, Energy, Forbes, Mar 30, 2020
- As Himalayas Warm, Nepal’s Climate Migrants Struggle to Survive by Bhadra Sharma & Kai Schultz, Asia Pacific, New York Times, Apr 5, 2020
- Central banks must target a green recovery after coronavirus, Opinion by Nick Bryer, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Apr 4, 2020
- Essential' but Unprotected, Farmworkers Live in Fear of Covid-19 but Keep Working by Evelyn Nieves, InsideClimate News, Apr 3, 2020
- The collapse of the US fracking industry, in seven charts by Tim McDonnell, Quartz, Apr 3, 2020
- Great Barrier Reef suffers its most widespread mass bleaching event on record by Maddie Stone, Capital Weather Gang, Washington Post, Apr 6, 2020
- Alberta’s $5.3 Billion Backing of Keystone XL Signals Vulnerability of Canadian Oil by Nicholas Kusnetz, Inside Climate News, Apr 6, 2020
- 'Creating Our Legacies': The Elders Fighting for Climate Justice by Alex Schwartz, Earther, Gizmodo, Apr 6, 2020
Tue, Apr 7, 2020
- Gutting fuel economy standards during a pandemic is peak Trump by David Roberts, Energy & Environment, Vox, Apr 2, 2020
- Sorry to disappoint climate deniers, but coronavirus makes the low-carbon transition more urgent by John Hewson, The Conversation AU, Apr 6, 2020
- 5 Ways the Economic Upheaval of Coronavirus May Impact CO2 Emissions by Benjamin Storrow, E&E News/Scientific American, Apr 6, 2020
- What the Coronavirus Pandemic Can Teach Us About the Climate Emergency by Charles Komanoff & Christopher Ketcham, The Intercept, Apr 4, 2020
- In a Race Against Global Warming, Robins Are Migrating Earlier by Bob Berwyn, InsideClimate News, Apr 7, 2020
- What We Pretend to Know About the Coronavirus Could Kill Us, Opinion by Charlie Warzel, Sunday Review, New York Times, Apr 3, 2020
- The Green New Deal Is Cheap, Actually by Tim Dickinson, Politics, Rolling Stone Magazine, Apr 6, 2020
Wed, Apr 8, 2020
- Airlines urge UN body to ease climate goals for 2020s as traffic collapses by Chloé Farand, Climate Home News, Apr 6, 2020
- Five trees or a latte? Coastal communities seek crowdfunding for mangroves by Michael Taylor, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Apr 6, 2020
- Crossbreeding corals: the hunt for ways to heal the Great Barrier Reef by Johan Augustin, Environment, Guardian, Apr 4, 2020
- Pope says coronavirus pandemic could be nature's response to climate crisis by Delia Gallagher, CNN, Apr 8, 2020
- Climate change: UK forests 'could do more harm than good' by Roger Harrabin, Science & Environment, BBC News, Apr 8, 2020
- Why Coronavirus Conspiracy Theories Flourish. And Why It Matters. by Max Fisher, The Interpreter, New York Times, Apr 8, 2020
- Unchecked Global Warming Could Collapse Whole Ecosystems, Maybe Within 10 Years by Bob Berwyn, InsideClimate New, Apr 8, 2020
- Oil Companies Are Collapsing, but Wind and Solar Energy Keep Growing by Ivan Penn, Energy & Environment, New York Times, Apr 7, 2020
Thu, Apr 9, 2020
- Homeschooling during coronavirus: five ways to teach children about climate change by William Finnegan. Education, The Conversation UK. Ap 7, 2020
- A.I. Is Helping Scientists Understand an Ocean's Worth of Data by Tatiana Schlossberg, New York Times, Apr 8, 2020
- Trump EPA’s ‘Secret Science’ Rule Would Dismiss Studies That Could Hold Clues to Covid-19 by Marianne Lavelle, InsideClimate News, Apr 8, 2020
- Skeptical Science New Research for Week #14, 2020 by Doug Bostrom, Skeptical Science, Apr 8, 2020
- Deep emissions cuts this decade could prevent ‘abrupt ecological collapse’ by Daisy Dunne, Carbon Brief, Apr 8, 2020
- Cranky Uncle video: FLICC by John Cook, Cranky Uncle, Apr 4, 2020
- The Earth Is Telling Us We Must Rethink Our Growth Society, Analysis by William E Rees, The Tyee (Vancouver, BC), Apr 6, 2020
- Decades of Science Denial Related to Climate Change Has Led to Denial of the Coronavirus Pandemic by Neela Banerjee & David Hasemyer, InsideClimate News, Apr 8, 2020
Fri, Apr 10, 2020
- Climate Change and Infectious Diseases, Opinion by Arthur Wyns, Observations, Scientific American, Apr 9, 2020
- The Carbon Brief Profile: South Korea by Josh Gabbatiss, Carbon Brief, Apr 6, 2020
- Chile to peak emissions by 2025, under strengthened climate pledge by Megan Darby, Climate Home News, Apr 9. 2020
- Coronavirus collides with climate action - our chance to build a better world for all, Opinion by Rachel Kyte, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Apr 9, 2020
- How A Trillion More Trees Could Combat Climate Change by Robert Rapier, Energy, Forbes Magazine, Apr 9, 2020
- Animal Viruses Are Jumping to Humans. Forest Loss Makes It Easier. by Catrin Einhorn, Climate, New York Times, Apr 9, 2020
- Jennifer Nuzzo: “We’re Definitely Not Overreacting” to COVID-19 by Yvonne Bang, JSTOR Daily, Apr 6, 2020
Sat, Apr 11, 2020
- The US has a collective action problem that’s larger than the coronavirus crisis by Patrick Sharkey, Vox, Apr 10, 2020
- Illegal loggers uncowed by coronavirus as deforestation rises in Brazil by Jake Spring, Reuters, Apr 10, 2020
- Cities Are Flouting Flood Rules. The Cost: $1 Billion by Christopher Flavelle & John Schwartz, Climate, New York Times, Apr 9, 2020
- Opinion: Why carbon pricing is not sufficient to mitigate climate change—and how “sustainability transition policy” can help by Daniel Rosenbloom, Jochen Markard, Frank W. Geels & Lea Fuenfschilling, PNAS Journal, Apr 8, 2020
- What the Coronavirus Pandemic Teaches Us About Fighting Climate Change by Alice C Hill, In Brief, Council of Foreign Relations, April 10, 2020
- As Africa looks for clean power, nuclear interest grows by Farai Shawn Matiashe, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Apr 10, 2020
- The Best-Case Scenario for Coronavirus Is That It’s Way More Infectious Than We Think by David Wallace-Wells, Intelligencer, New York Magazine, Apr 10, 2020
Thank's for the covid 19 article. It is very detailed and one of the best I've read on the issue. However this company reckons they could have a vaccine on the market by September.
One reason Germany has a reasonably low mortality rate could be because it has a high number of hospital beds and also ventilators per 1000 people. In comparison Italy has the opposite. America is somewhere in the middle. I did some googling on this and didn't keep a record of the data and sources on ventilators, but you can find numbers of hospital beds per 1000 people here.
It appears there is a philosophy in some countries of minimising numbers of hospital beds to save costs and treat as many people at home as possible. I recall this from our media some years ago. Unfortunately this has problems when you get huge surges of patients with natural disasters and pandemics.
That said, numbers of beds would be one factor of many. It appears that even ventilators arent saving some people.
@Nigelj Couldn't disagree more. Nothing particularly new in this interview.
[1] Zoonotic origin. No direct evidence given for zoonotic origin. There are a host of obstacles to the zoonotic claim. Not mentioning these and not offering direct evidence means it's not scientific. Any scientific approach should not fail to mention strengths and weaknesses of competing hypotheses. That's the trouble with most slanted information/propaganda — failure to take into account contrary evidence and hypotheses, which are almost always present.
[2] I have not seen anybody make a cost benefit case for social distancing. What will be the costs in human life years of the global depression we are now headed into? How many millions of families in the informal economy are already having to tell their children there is no food? How many people will have no health care access at all in the future? How many lives have we actually saved? Don't forget, a 12% save rate with people on ventilators is the highest claim I've seen; it was 5% in Wuhan. If we take a one year survivor horizon, it will be even slimmer. Most of the people that didn't go to ICU would survive without hospital care (oxygen can be administered at home), so it isn't at all clear what the lives saved margin really is. There is plenty of evidence that the R₀ (reproduction rates) rolled over before NPI's (non-pharmaceutical interventions) could have had an impact.
[3] China adopted HCQ + Zinc + Azithromycin +Remdesavir in their standard treatment guidelines after published clinical studies on Feb19. So did S. Korea, which had far lower mortality numbers. Yes, there are a lot more angles to this, but we seem incapable of learning from the Chinese. Do we actually know if the oral-fecal route is not important? Do we know whether health care itself is not a primary vector? Do we know how minor the aerosol vector is? The Chinese and Koreans (index patient 31, super spreader) warned about asymptomatic carriers in January (later studies show 79% of infections caused by asymptomatic carriers), but many Western countries denied it. Singapore warned about the extreme transmissability via various routes. China immediately started building/dedicating facilities b/c hospitals were transmission nodes, and a third of the health care workers in Wuhan were out of commission. Interview does not mention any of this.
[4] Vaccines. This is happy talk. Is there a vaccine for HIV or SARS? No. Vaccine formulations for SARS led to ADE in cats (antigen dependant enhancement, making subsequent infection progress more catastrophically instead of less). Are there any virus diseases which we have been able to eradicate, barring small pox? Are there any vaccines against Corona viruses human or veterinarian which give more than an ephemeral protection? Do people have long-lasting antibodies to protect them against colds (Corona viruses)? No. Does everybody show strong antigen protection after recovery from Covid? No, au contraire.
[5] Did we do a good job protecting our health care and the most vulnerable? No. Having schools shut does not significantly impact ICU demand. The entire spike in ICU demand would have to come from the risk groups. But we have shut down the economy without taking appropriate steps to quarantine the most important vector (the vulnerable), which represent virtually the entire pool (>98%) of ICU demand. 40% of deaths have come from nursing homes, globally! Not counting all those who die at home (too frail to go to ICU). These places/people should have been locked down in February, with zero people entering or exiting. Pay the staff triple overtime for staying on premise (way cheaper than Tr$6 to save all the banks and hedge funds).
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JWRebel,
Please provide references for all your claims. The zoonotic orgin has been demonstrated by DNA analysis. Likewise the rest of your claims are not what has been widely reported in newspapers (I read the Guardian, BBC, Politico, CNN, LA Times and NY Times.).
JWRebel @2
There are far too many points and questions for me to respond to, so Ive just picked out a few that relate to things I have some knowledge of form our media.
"Nothing particularly new in this interview."
Ok maybe so, but you seem to be judging it as something meant to inform experts. It was intended more for the general public that may know virtually nothing about the issues.
"[1] Zoonotic origin. No direct evidence given for zoonotic origin"
Sounds a bit like your unsubstantiated opinion. And its an article directed at the general public not a 20 page thesis on the subject!
"[2] I have not seen anybody make a cost benefit case for social distancing. "
I have in our local media. I can't find the article but they assumed about $2 million (NZ) per human life being average earnings potential and deduced from this the government could spend $150 billion on assistance to business during a lock down, thus giving a basis to put a time frame on a lock down (all other things being equal).
"What will be the costs in human life years of the global depression we are now headed into? "
We don't know that we are heading into a global depression. The data suggests a deep recession at this stage. But I take your point, an economic recession or depression can cost lives, and obviously reduce quality of life.
My own view is that the scenario in Italy is very scary, and some level of border controls and social isolation seems very justified in my country at least (New Zealand), especially as we had a lot of tourism, but I'm not immune to the considerable economic problems lock downs bring, and their social and health implications. That is also very scary. For that reason I think lock downs have to be of limited duration, enough to buy time to strengthen health care systems, deveop a vaccine, and flatten the curve. Just so you know where I'm coming from.
"How many lives have we actually saved? "Don't forget, a 12% save rate with people on ventilators is the highest claim I've seen; it was 5% in Wuhan. If we take a one year survivor horizon, it will be even slimmer. Most of the people that didn't go to ICU would survive without hospital care (oxygen can be administered at home), so it isn't at all clear what the lives saved margin really is. "
Where have you seen your claims about ventilators? Administering oxygen at home has various logistical complications and the patient is certainly going to be infecting the whole family. But I don't really know I'm not a health care expert.
"[3] China adopted HCQ + Zinc + Azithromycin +Remdesavir in their standard treatment guidelines after published clinical studies on Feb19. So did S. Korea, which had far lower mortality numbers. Yes, there are a lot more angles to this, but we seem incapable of learning from the Chinese. "
Who is we? New Zealand has copied China's lock down policy and social distancing and shortly after this rates of growth in infections started to slow and I doubt its a coincidence. Nothing much else explains it. We also used track and trace from very early on like Asian countries. Our infection rates and fatality rates are quite low comparitively speaking (easily googled).
"Do we actually know if the oral-fecal route is not important?"
This is a rather technical question for this climate website.
" Do we know whether health care itself is not a primary vector? "
I recall reading that hospitals are a major source of spread and its important to keep covid 19 patients in their own isolated wards and keep health care professionals divided into groups, and that some places are doing this.
No doubt there are things we dont know. Im not sure what you real point is. Its a new virus, the experts are dealing with it as best they can.
I have read several experts saying aerosols are a minor factor and why, and none saying they are a major factor.
"China immediately started building/dedicating facilities b/c hospitals were transmission nodes, and a third of the health care workers in Wuhan were out of commission. Interview does not mention any of this."
No it didn't. Maybe they should have, but no interview printed in the media is going to cover everything.
"[4] Vaccines. This is happy talk. Is there a vaccine for HIV or SARS? No. "
But my understanding is the Sars vaccine was cancelled because SARS fizzled out.
"Are there any virus diseases which we have been able to eradicate, barring small pox? "
Why are you asking me this? Vaccines keep measels and seasonal flu at very low levels (depending on public uptake). Dont make the perfect the enemy of the good.
Are there any vaccines against Corona viruses human or veterinarian which give more than an ephemeral protection? Do people have long-lasting antibodies to protect them against colds (Corona viruses)? No."
I read an article that although getting a corunavirus related cold does not give immunity, people who get reinfected dont have any symptoms or symptoms are at very low level as below, so its possible it may be the same with covid 19:
https://play.stuff.co.nz/details/_6145112480001
"[5] Did we do a good job protecting our health care and the most vulnerable? No. "
Again who is we? New Zealand required elderly (over 70) and vulnerable to self isolate early in the growth curve. Personally I think that is the key to the whole issue.
"Having schools shut does not significantly impact ICU demand. The entire spike in ICU demand would have to come from the risk groups. But we have shut down the economy without taking appropriate steps to quarantine the most important vector (the vulnerable), which represent virtually the entire pool (>98%) of ICU demand. 40% of deaths have come from nursing homes, globally! Not counting all those who die at home (too frail to go to ICU). These places/people should have been locked down in February, with zero people entering or exiting. Pay the staff triple overtime for staying on premise (way cheaper than Tr$6 to save all the banks and hedge funds)."
Sounds like you mean America? Young people are carriers and often asymptomatic, so surely that ultimately means it spreads at school and from there to older people? That said, I admit closing schools is a big thing and can't last indefinitely for obvious reasons.
Like I said we in NZ have isolated the elderly in home isolation early in the growth curve. However it leaves the rest home problem, although they have stopped allowing visitors from a couple of weeks ago. Most of our fatalities have been from a rest home cluster. I agree pay rest home (nursing home) staff triple the pay to stay on the premises.
Rebel @2, clarification. "[1] Zoonotic origin. No direct evidence given for zoonotic origin"...."Sounds a bit like your unsubstantiated opinion."
I meant to say I recall reading there was direct evidence, and that you are making quite a few assertions without explaining yourself.
" Are there any virus diseases which we have been able to eradicate, barring small pox?"
I am surprised that JW Rebel is asking a question that is so easy to answer.
-Rabies, effectively eradicated among humans and even animal populations with enough coverage.
_Polio, wherever campaigns were completed as planned, effectively eradicated in the Western World.
-Mumps, same as above.
-Varicella, same again.
-Rubella, same.
Some vaccines have not been available for long enough but HPV caused cancers can potentially be eradicated. Same goes for Hepatitis A and B.
There has been some pseudo-debate on the value of vaccinating against Measles, but the reality remains that Measles can potentially be quite serious, leading to penumonia or encephalitis, or even subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, possibly decades later. There is no honest debate to be had there.
J W Rebel @2.
"Don't forget, a 12% save rate with people on ventilators is the highest claim I've seen; it was 5% in Wuhan."
Correct about Wuhan. About 30% in the UK and Washington State survive as below. This appears to be the best outcome, with 55% being normal for other respiratory problems. So its not as bad as you say but still pretty bad.
www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/04/02/826105278/ventilators-are-no-panacea-for-critically-ill-covid-19-patients
J W Rebel @2.
"[1] Zoonotic origin. No direct evidence given for zoonotic origin"
Yes there is.
How China’s “Bat Woman” Hunted Down Viruses from SARS to the New Coronavirus
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-chinas-bat-woman-hunted-down-viruses-from-sars-to-the-new-coronavirus1/
[JH] Activated url link.
JW Rebel's multiple points appear extremely ill informed, and have internal contradictions.
Zoonotic origin has been firmly established.
Hydroxychloroquine is no panacea and has significant side effects, including cardiac arrest, arrythmias requiring defibrillation, profound hypoglycemia etc. It is by no means a risk free drug. Overdose is extremely toxic, often lethal. When I was growing up in Africa, it was known to be a suicide risk for troubled teens who had to take malaria prophylaxis, like everybody else. There is no conclusive evidence that HCQ/AZT actually helps outcomes.
Asian countries achieved control at the price of drastic social distancing and self quarantine measures, the very thing that JW Rebel complains about.
The fact that the survival rate of critically ill patients is low makes a strong argument for limiting contagion, less we allow something similar to the 1918 pandemic to happen.
The whole point of social distancing is to prevent overwhelming health care facilities. The alternative would be to not practice distancing and tell people to not bring their sick relative to the hospital. We're talking about people in their 50s and early 60s, here; they work, they have families and other responsibilities. How is that going to go down in the Western world where we find it normal to code, intubate and throw heroic measures at people in their 90s with multiple chronic conditions?
The fact that most working families do not have savings to withstand a crisis on the horizon of a few months speaks volumes on how unhealthy the entire socio-economic system has become. The fact that corporations that pay dividends would not be able to have a financial safety cushion is just mind boggling.
Philippe Chantreau @9 says "Hydroxychloroquine is no panacea and has significant side effects"
Correct and the clinical trials related to its usefulness for covid 19 were very small and somewhat inconclusive as below:
www.vox.com/2020/4/7/21209539/coronavirus-hydroxychloroquine-covid-19-clinical-trial
In addition there is quite strong evidence emerging that China have severely under reported numbers of fatalities, (easily enough googled) so their cocktail of drugs including Hydroxychloroquine doesn't appear to have been terribly effective.
If it was up to me Hydroxychloroquine might be worth trying just for very high risk patients where the prognosis is very bleak.
It looks more like Chinas lock down measures that actually worked to at least stop the growth in numbers.
Note to those involved in climate discussions: Dr. Fred Singer passed away April 6th at the age of 95.
Singer spent much of his life engaged in climate science denial, tirelessly denigrating good science in favor of industry and idiological positions.
As Max Planck said, “A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.”
This is equally true when said opponent is motivated by something other than science.
Nigelj, I believe that what little data is there actually supports using it early in the disease process. Waiting to use it as a rescue measure would then not be wise, especially because of the added risk of throwing cardiac side effects on top of a possible viral myocarditis. All hypothetical, of course. This is kinda uncharted territory really.
KR , the WaPo link is to paywall. Likewise with NYT.
Free access to a biography / hagiography via WUWT or maybe ClimateDepot.
Unfortunately, the Scythe of Time cuts down both the good and the bad.