What this year's hot, wet, extreme weather tells us about climate change - "The Takeout"

CBS News' Ben Tracy and Jeff Berardelli talk climate change and weather disasters on "The Takeout" — 9/3/2021

This summer has seen no shortage of extreme weather events: Hurricane Ida ripped through Louisiana and Mississippi before the storm's remnants slammed the Northeast this week, bringing devastating floods, winds, and tornadoes that left at least 47 people dead and millions without power across the eastern U.S. In the West, the Caldor Fire — one of the largest in California history — has burned at least 200,000 acres of land along the California and Nevada border and won't be fully contained for weeks.

For CBS News meteorologist and climate specialist Jeff Berardelli and CBS News' senior national and environmental correspondent Ben Tracy, this year's weather is a new phenomenon.

"As someone who studied weather my whole life, I've never seen anything like this before. That's how crazy the weather is this summer," Berardelli told chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett on this week's episode of "The Takeout" podcast. "It's not just your imagination. It's not just media or social media. It is the fact that it's actually the case."

Berardelli said there's no doubt that Earth's warmer atmosphere is caused by human activity, and the extreme weather in recent years is a direct result of that.

"We have more energy in the system. When you have more energy, everything is spiked and enhanced and made worse," Berardelli said. "That is the case with floods, because the atmosphere can hold more moisture. We also think the jet stream may be kind of becoming more loopy and slowing down, causing systems to slow [and increasing the potential for more flooding]. That's what happened in Tennessee. That's what happened in Europe."

Tracy, formerly a CBS News White House correspondent, said that finding a collective way to adapt to climate change is imperative for the survival of Earth and humanity.

"This is critical. This is about the future of the planet," Tracy said. "Sometimes that can seem alarmist, but that's exactly what we're talking about, is what kind of world are we going to live in, what kind of world, where will our children and grandchildren live in?"

Both Berardelli and Tracy said that there are solutions to help humans adapt and potentially reverse some aspects of climate change, but entire industries will have to make long-term shifts towards sustainability before it's too late.

"I'm just really grateful that we're investing time and resources into going out in the country and showing people not only the problems, but also some solutions that are being developed. And there are some out there, and we're trying to find those and bring them to people so they don't get this feeling that all hope is lost," Tracy said.

"There is warming baked into the cake here. But how warm it gets, how hot it gets, what impacts people is still up to us," he added.

Berardelli said that the coming years will be pivotal in the fight to adapt to climate change.

"This is an opportunity to revive and put a lot of money back into not just the middle of America, but the whole country and create jobs for people who haven't had great jobs in the past," Berardelli said. "This new industry ... has to blossom extraordinarily fast if we are to save ourselves from the climate."


Highlights from this week's episode:

  • Tracy on ongoing droughts in the Western U.S.: "We keep saying a drought, but a drought is something that tends to have a beginning and an end. But this could be something that's more severe than that, that this could just be where they're headed for the decades to come.
  • Tracy on the urgency in addressing climate change: "This is critical. This is about the future of the planet. Sometimes that can seem alarmist, but that's exactly what we're talking about, is what kind of world are we going to live in, what kind of world, where will our children and grandchildren live in?"
  • Berardelli on the rate of change in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere: "I'll just emphasize it's that rate of change that's a big problem. It's not the change that happened over thousands of years. It wouldn't be a big deal. But it's happening over literally decades and centuries, which really complicates matters in terms of us adapting and mitigating."
  • Berardelli on record-setting wildfires around the world: "As long as we continue to warm the atmosphere, we're going to continue to dry out the soil. Fires will continue to get worse. And as we've seen in California, there are climate refugees now, people that are migrating within the state, displaced within the state or or actually moving out of the state."
  • Berardelli on solutions to climate change: "This is an opportunity to revive and put a lot of money back into not just the middle of America, but the whole country and create jobs for people who haven't had great jobs in the past... There will be some fossil fuel workers who are going to have to probably their jobs won't be around it. And we have to thank them for what they've done because they've literally built our economic might on their shoulders. So we absolutely, absolutely have to take care of them. But the good news is, in a lot of these same places, there are a lot of jobs in clean energy, energy efficiency. And in this new industry that has to blossom extraordinarily fast if we are to save ourselves from the climate."

For more of Major's conversation with Berardelli and Tracy, download "The Takeout" podcast on Art19, iTunesSpotifyGoogle Podcasts, and Stitcher. New episodes are available every Friday morning. Also, you can watch "The Takeout" on CBSN Friday at 5pm, 9pm, and 12am ET and Saturday at 1pm, 9pm, and 12am ET. For a full archive of "The Takeout" episodes, visit www.takeoutpodcast.com. And you can listen to "The Takeout" on select CBS News Radio affiliates (check your local listings).    

Producers: Arden Farhi, Jamie Benson, Jacob Rosen, Sara Cook and Eleanor Watson
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