Source: https://weather.com/news/news/shelby-county-alabama-pipeline-explosion?cm_ven=FB_NEWS_CW_103116_1
"Drivers in the southeast and along the east coast may soon see price increases at the pump."
So, the very same Alabama pipeline (which runs from Houston to New York) that caused the 'gas crisis' here in Tennessee a few weeks ago has exploded, leaving several people injured and one dead.
The blast is said to have occurred five miles away from the original gas leak, and the article is unclear about the possible correlation of the two sites. Although, considering the huge distance the pipes travel, one has to wonder...
In Atmosphere of Hope, Flannery commented on the questionable safety of conventional fuel transportation. He didn't totally convince me with his anecdote, but this example is more than a little convincing.
The immediate effects of a pipeline explosion such as this are:
- initial damage of the blast area
- fires igniting, given sufficient fuel (which exists in abundance in Northern Alabama)
- spread of hazardous material - in this case, gasoline
Fire departments and emergency services are rushing to contain the damage, and there's a 'no-burn' order across all of northern Alabama.
Loss of life, tangible environmental damage, imminent panic and a rush to fill up at the gas station.
Are these drawbacks not enough to get people thinking in the right direction about where we get our energy?
Unfortunately, it's very easy to believe that a death and some fires a state away isn't enough to sway anyone's opinion. Even the frightened flight to the gas stations to tank up before the impending gas shortage a la Mad Max isn't enough to persuade people to think about their energy sources.
I have always been of the opinion that it will take some sort of catastrophic event and loss of human life that can be indisputably equated to climate change in order to change public opinion, and therefore enact political change.
The Chinese environmentalists that say they are thankful for smog for enacting change aren't very far off of my train of thought; I just hope that change in the West requires a push no less gentle.
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