NEW WEST FEATURE
Al Gore to Headline Seminar on Climate Change and the West
From beetle blights to explosive wildfires, Western forests are seeing the impacts of climate change. For the first time, scientists and land managers are gathering to discuss the impact of a heating globe on the West.By David Frey, 2-01-11
![]() |
|
When Aspen, Colo. resident John Bennett flew across Colorado after the devastating pine beetle infestation had taken effect, he was shocked by what he saw.
“I had a very strong sense of flying over a cemetery. A vast graveyard,” he said.
Entire pine forests had turned brown and died as the beetle epidemic spread, and the death toll of trees continues to rise, not just across Colorado, but across a swath of forest from Canada to the Mexican border.
Forests across the West are seeing a confluence of factors killing off trees in numbers never before seen in human history. Various beetles are attacking weakened pines, spruce and pinons. Wildfires have reached explosive proportions. Aspens, the iconic tree of the west, are falling ill and dying in massive numbers. No single cause is behind all of them, but scientists believe climate change is one factor they all have in common.
For the first time ever, a group of scientists and land managers will come together in Aspen in February to discuss the plight of Western forests and the role climate change is playing in it.
Former Vice President Al Gore, whose film An Inconvenient Truth helped shine a spotlight on climate change and earned him the Nobel Peace Prize, will speak at the event. So will Harris Sherman, the agriculture undersecretary who oversees the forest service, an indication of how seriously the Obama administration is taking threats of global warming.
“The current administration clearly seems to understand climate change and its implications,” said Bennett, executive director of the group For the Forest, which is hosting the symposium Forests at Risk: Climate Change & the Future of the American West on Feb. 18 in Aspen. “The difficulty of course is that Congress so far has not gone along.”
Bennett’s group formed when a group of Aspen residents became concerned about lodgepole pines around the resort town turning brown and dying. Aspen wasn’t alone. Some 50 million acres of pines, from British Columbia across the American West, have been affected by the bark beetle.
After a conference on the beetle epidemic last year, Bennett said he heard overwhelming support for a broader conference focused on the various threats to Western forests that scientists believe are linked to climate change.
“Clearly our scientists in the Forest Service are seeing shifts in climatic patterns that lead to the outbreak of insect disease and forest health problems that we’re seeing firsthand,” said Scott Fiztwilliams, forest supervisor for Colorado’s White River National Forest, which includes ski resorts like Aspen and Vail.
With some 23 million visitors a year, the White River National Forest the most heavily-recreated national forest in the country, Fitzwilliams said. Poised at the headwaters of the Colorado River and key Denver water supplies, the forest is responsible for municipal water for 23 million people across the West.
That may make the forest unique in the effects of climate change, but it’s hardly alone. Forests across the west are facing the same issues of blight and wildfire that have scarred its mountainsides and left broad swaths of trees decimated.
“Those who understand the danger that climate change offers to our future, our quality of life, tend to speak too often of distant threats in far-ff places,” Bennett said. “Rarely do we talk about the things that are happening in our own backyard. I think that’s a mistake. I think we need to focus more closely on the real, personal effects of climate change and how they are affecting our neighborhoods, our homes and the world around us.”
Follow David Frey at www.davidmfrey.com and on Twitter.
Like this story? Get more! Sign up for our free newsletters.





Comments
Yep, gotta gather the biggest acts in the green aristocracy to take on this gargantuan greenwashing and beg for donations!!
Never mind that Aspen has always been, well, Aspen.
These people have time and money to waste....let them.
If we could "magically fix" the climate situation, we would still have catastrophic wildfires and losses of old growth P. pine habitat. I predict his "solution" will be to "let nature take its course", ignoring the fuels buildups, probable soils damage, ESA violations, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc.
Media is the enemy now. Don't trust them. Don't read them. Don't listen to them. Don't watch them. Don't give them any more credibility. The net is a learning tool and we can decide for ourselves. We don't need mainscream media anymore.
Scientists, consultants, lab coat consultants, PR firms, politicians, blood thirsty media, carbon stock trading...........WAKE UP!
Without my twice daily dose of Michael Weiner (Savage) I get constipated.
The facts of climate past and climate future are not related to the weather...Weather is the result...
Facts always close the pie holes of the deniers. Get em Al!
Gaia has a fever and she will take care of her infection...
However, 22 millions acres of dead trees will surely cost us billions of dollars in wildfire impacts and human suffering. This doom for our forests has been predicted for many, many years, and preservationists continue to embrace this violent and damaging "re-wilding" of forests into snag patches, choking brush and enhanced erosion.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1L3L8mcGXbo
Why do so many people think they know all about the intricacies of complex forests and their natural (and historical) facts?
Also, "interestingly", he mentions taking 3 intercontinental flights to read the energy bill he was commenting on. NO, he doesn't get a "free pass" for emissions, especially when he just bought yet another mansion to keep empty for when he is off flying around the world, or at one of his other mansions. And how many "gardenistas" with leaf blowers does it take to keep the grounds spotless?
The Latent Heat of Fusion has kept the climate stable. Put a thermometer in a glass filled with ice. The temp does not change till all the ice is gone. Then the latent heat of vaporization sets in. That's when things get interesting.
Not so many primates crawling around when that gets going.
Chaos theory guarantees that we are in for exceptional surprises.
So do the Ice cores.
So do the deep sea sediment cores.
All of the lodge poles are dying in the great drying.
Once again proving that “De Nile is not just a river in Egypt…”