Globe Climate: In the fires, after the floods
Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, environment and resources in Canada.
Although in this newsletter today we will look back at the aftermath of the floods down south, readers should be looking ahead to wildfires in the Prairies.
Officials in Manitoba are hopeful that with the help of international firefighters alongside cooler, wetter weather will slow raging wildfires. The province has declared its second state of emergency this year, and has started a new round of evacuations.
There are more than 560 active wildfires burning and 140 are considered out of control, prompting more than 345 air quality alerts and advisories in five provinces and one territory.
Follow our reporting this week.
Now, let's catch you up on other news.
For this week's deeper dive, a closer look at the deadliest flash flood in Texas in more than a century, and the signals it sends to other places prone to flooding.
Had there been just a slight shift in direction, the entire storm system might have passed without notice.
But despite unfolding in a place long known by the name 'Flash Flood Alley' the storm's severity caught nearly everyone off guard, and led to endless stories of human tragedy.
But, as water reporter Patrick White says in his story this past week, there's a political tale playing out here, too.
Flash floods are America's top storm-related killer, and climate change is making them more powerful. Patrick traveled to Kerrville, Tex. to speak to people on the ground. Along the Guadalupe River, locals recited past disasters like scripture: '32, '78, '87.
Yet, in this area with flood deaths going back generations, improvements to the warning system had been put off, even nixed. It's part of a difficult conversation in a region where climate change, though increasingly impossible to ignore, is often denied and remains politically untouchable.
The Texas disaster has put a focus on both the risk of flash flooding as well as how to predict or prevent it.
This particular county gave nearly 80 per cent of its vote to Donald Trump. When Patrick asked one flood victim about the scientific phenomenon, he went on a tangent that touched on Pizzagate, the mass harvesting of children's organs and other conspiracy theories. A woman who launched a petition for flood sirens on the river told him climate change was a liberal theory and equated it with cloud seeding.
The President's budget for next year includes a 27-per-cent cut to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the weather service's parent organization, including shutting down its entire research arm, which has labs studying the effects of climate change. Experts have warned for months that deep staffing cuts could endanger lives.
Meanwhile, researchers are also worried Canada isn't doing enough to prevent such disasters here. Ryan Ness of the Canadian Climate Institute says the country needs to invest in flood mapping, infrastructure and early warning systems.
Ness said many parts of Canada don't have flood maps, 'so it's hard to know where to protect or where to send warnings.'
He also said flash flooding can be made worse in areas burned by wildfire, which Canadians are in the throes of managing.
Tanya Talaga: News of a deep-sea port along the James Bay coast is a surprise to those who live there
Deliah Bernard: Instead of scrapping Indigenous consultations, let's make them better
Janice Locke: My apple cores brought nature to my doorstep – then some bigger guests arrived
Canadian cleantech veteran aims to make AI a force for good
Nicholas Parker, a long-time investor and adviser to companies and policymakers, is betting artificial intelligence will be a force for sustainability – and that there's money to be made.
He has been evaluating how AI can boost energy efficiency, streamline industrial processes and reduce CO2 emissions across numerous industries. Now he and his team are bringing together experts, entrepreneurs and investors to marshal some of the US$138-billion they say will be required to scale AI technologies for sustainability over the next five years.
We've launched the next chapter of The Climate Exchange, an interactive, digital hub where The Globe answers your most pressing questions about climate change. More than 300 questions were submitted as of September. The first batch of answers tackles 30 of them. They can be found with the help of a search tool developed by The Globe that makes use of artificial intelligence to match readers' questions with the closest answer drafted. We plan to answer a total of 75 questions.
We want to hear from you. Email us: GlobeClimate@globeandmail.com. Do you know someone who needs this newsletter? Send them to our Newsletters page.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
36 minutes ago
- CTV News
Thousands without power in St. Boniface, Southdale
Manitoba Hydro power lines are photographed just outside Winnipeg on May 1, 2018. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods) Thousands of people are without power on Monday afternoon in Winnipeg's St. Boniface and Southdale areas. According to a Manitoba Hydro social media post, 2,620 customers are experiencing an outage. The Crown corporation did not provide a cause or an estimated time of restoration. CTV News has reached out for more information.


CTV News
44 minutes ago
- CTV News
Manitoba weather: Rain expected to start week
Daniel Halmarson has your current conditions and updated weather forecast for July 14, 2025. Daniel Halmarson has your current conditions and updated weather forecast for July 14, 2025. Southern Manitoba will start the week with cooler temperatures and periods of rain. Scattered showers and light winds are expected throughout Monday from the U.S. border to the Interlake, with highs in the low 20s. More rain is anticipated through the night into Tuesday morning, though it should let up by lunchtime. Air quality statements are in effect for most of Manitoba due to wildfire smoke, but no warnings are in place. Expand Autoplay 1 of 28 Gull Harbour Gull Harbour Lighthouse (Photo by Brett House) Notre Dame de Lourdes Beautiful and happy owl on perfect day. (Photo by Diane Simon) Great Balls of Peonies Gator and Harlow wholeheartedly agrees to the heavenly scent. (Photo by Pat Payjack) Lake Red Squirrel We feed the lake red squirrel corn on the cob on his special feeder. (Photo by Tania Kruk) Storm Storm last night near St-Pierre (Photo by Genevieve Hacault) Breezy morning Breezy morning and quite smokey (Photo by Andrew Ashett) Lightning flash on Caddy Lake Lightning flash on Caddy Lake, Whiteshell Prov. Park. (Photo by Mariam Bernstein) Beautiful Sunset Beautiful sunset in the Durban area. (Photo by Ryan Mccullough) Bald Eagle Bald eagle is drying its feathers after going after something in the river. (Photo by Allan Robertson) Red Sunset Red sunset (Photo by Ben Holyk) Mallard duckling Mallard duckling in action catching insects. (Photo by Wade Munro) The gulls are everywhere The gulls are everywhere (Photo by Pat Payjack) Rainbow Rainbow over St. Malo. (Photo by Linda Gay) Bird River No better way too start our holidays than coffee on the dock! (Photo by Tania Kruk) Split Lake Fire, smoke, Northern lights and the moon from my backyard. (Photo by Taralee Beardy) An artist touches up a mural An artist touches up a mural on the Gimli seawall as a storm rolls through in the distance. (Photo by Desiree Rantala) Northern lights Northern lights over Split Lake (Photo by Taralee Beardy) Sparkles and water Sparkles and water (Photo by Sheryl Twardoski) North Kildonan North Kildonan (Photo by Shirley Wark) Near Gimli Near Gimli (Photo by Cynthia Morrow) Rainbow Rainbow over Rainbow RM of Elton (Photo by Lacey Burdeniuk) Lee river sunset Lee river sunset (Photo by Ken Horn) Near Morris Near Morris (Photo by Sandra Harder) After the storm After the storm in Dropmore (Photo by Dan Watson) Rainbow Rainbow over Altbergthal, Manitoba (Photo by Jennifer Klassen) Stormy Sky Stormy sky Near Elm Creek (Photo by Tina Doell) Somerset storm Somerset storm (Photo by Amber Hacault) Mother Nature's own fireworks for Canada Day Mother Nature provided some spectacular fireworks for Canada Day! (Photo by Kat Hedges) However, Environment and Climate Change Canada warns air quality and visibility can vary considerably from hour to hour. The weather agency urges people to limit time outdoors and monitor respiratory symptoms. There is less chance for showers in northern Manitoba, and temperatures will linger in the mid to high teens. Sunny skies and closer to normal temperatures are expected Tuesday.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
The N.L. Folk Festival takes a bow for this year — and could be turning out the stage lights
The 49th annual Folk Festival wrapped up in Bannerman Park on Sunday, with lead organizers saying its days are likely numbered. The CBC's Abby Cole was there to take the temperature of festival goers.