Trump Revolution: Climate Crisis is a poignant indictment of U.S President Donald Trump's four years long administration, but the accusation is very detailed, and this time is not related to his managing of the res publica during the coronavirus crisis. Lockdowns simply don’t work against climate change, and since the pandemic has monopolized the news, urgent issues as global warming and air pollution have taken the back seat but have not gone away. Although it’s just open as an online gallery, the Bronx Documentary Center’s latest exhibition fittingly revives the interest for the topic: curated by Exhibition Coordinator Cynthia Rivera and Executive Director Michael Kamber, Trump Revolution: Climate Crisis is the Center’s second show about the U.S. (and global) reality under Trump’s administration. If he is actually not held responsible for the planet’s health conditions, still there’s no doubt that he hasn’t been doing anything to change the course of events and that, in fact, he has been committed to threaten and undermine every attempt of reconfiguring people’s thoughts and behavior towards the climate issue. This time the charge is filed through the work of six photographers committed on the front of consciousness and denunciation that, thanks to different looks — that share the same spirit of involvement towards the subjects they document — on different places — which are facets of the same issue — convey a complex and polymorphic picture that reactivate our sensibility on this topics. In Cancer Alley, Stacy Kranitz visits the hyper industrialized shores of Mississippi river between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, where in the latest years low–income and largely black Americans communities have seen a huge increase of the pollution–related deaths. Katie Orlinsky reaches Alaska, the climate change “Ground Zero” according to the scientists: her Chasing Winter is then an attempt to preconize the planet’s fate through a well–known but always relevant case study. Bryan Thomas’ The Sea in the Darkness Calls deals with Florida’s coastal erosion, where the rising of sea level is putting a strain on an economy mainly based on seaside tourism and, so, on the lives of most of the inhabitants. From the Sunshine State to the Golden one guided by Marcus Yam, who whit California Burning focuses on one of the most painful sores of U.S recent history: arson, whose “season” lasts by now all year long and is destabilizing the ecosystem of one of the — so far — most livable places in the world. On display there’s also the prize winning Arctic: The New Frontier, a four–handed work by the Danish Kadir van Lohuizen and the Russian Yuri Kozyrev who have crossed the Arctic Circle simultaneously, one on the western passage and the other from the Russian side, documenting the diverse aspects related to the Pole ice melting: a slow but relentless event that is once again bond to change the face of the world.
Climate crisis in Trump's America
With Trump Revolution: Climate Crisis, the Bronx Documentary Center reminds us that, besides the coronavirus one, another emergency is still underway.
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- Raffaele Vertaldi
- 31 May 2020
Gordon Omnik is whale hunter from Point Hope. He stands on watch to spot Bowhead whales. The Inuit community of Point Hope is allowed to catch 10 bowheads per year. Native communities are allowed to hunt whales for their own use. The quota is given by the International Whaling Commission. Nowadays due to the early disappearance of the sea ice it's much harder for the community to catch whales and it threatens their livelihood. Normally the hunting starts when the sea ice starts to break in the spring. When the whales migrate up north, they use the channels to come up for breathing. If there is no ice they are spread out over a much wider area and are much more difficult to track.
A 16-year-old resident of Island View Drive wipes her tears, as she looks on at her family's home destroyed by the Thomas fire, the morning after the fire started, in Ventura, Calif., on Dec. 5, 2017.
In this Oct. 31, 2019, photo, smoke from the Maria Fire billows above Santa Paula, Calif. California regulators are voting Wednesday, Nov. 13, on whether to open an investigation into pre-emptive power outages that blacked out large parts of the state for much of October as strong winds sparked fears of wildfires. The state’s largest utility, Pacific Gas & Electric Co., initiated multiple rounds of shut-offs that plunged nearly 2.5 million people into darkness throughout northern and central California.
Three plants of Norilsk — the nickel factory, the copper factory and the metallurgical complex "Nadejda” (“Hope”), were built successively in 1942, 1949 and 1981. 56% of the population works in these places.
As part of plans to clean up Norilsk’s reputation, in June of 2016 the company Norilsk Nickel shut down its nickel factory: a 74-year-old enterprise that emitted 350,000 tonnes of sulphur dioxide each year. But other plants in Norilsk have taken on the nickel factory’s operations, while the final stages of production are being transferred to plants in the Murmansk region, which Norway has long accused of sending “death clouds” of pollution across its border with Russia.
April 2017, Louisiana. The massive Exxon chemical plant is situated next to the ExxonMobil Refinery in the Standard Heights neighborhood of Baton Rouge. ExxonMobil Chemical Company has been caught regularly releasing air pollution above what is lawfully allowed in its permit. The harmful and hazardous air pollutants include dangerous and carcinogenic chemicals and gases such as benzene, toluene, propylene, ethylene, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, hexane, methylene chloride, and other volatile organic compounds. Evidence also shows that the plant has released toxic air pollution that the facility doesn’t have permits to release. Exxon’s reporting consistently lacks enough detail to comply with regulations and does not provide nearby residents crucial information about their potential exposures to dangerous pollution.
September 2017, Louisiana. In 1890, the Louisiana state legislature designated Southern University as a land grant college for African American’s to support higher education for all students in the state. Southern has the second largest student body population of people of color in the country after Howard University in Washington, D.C. The historic University offers beautiful views of the Mississippi River, but this comes at a cost since it is located next to the Devil’s Swamp Superfund site and surrounded by petro- chemical plants and toxic waste sites. A slew of leaks, discharges and accidents have impacted Southern, including toxic leaking railroad tank cars, ruptured pipelines, chemical spills from tank trucks, and leaking barges on the river, making it the most adversely impacted institution of higher learning in the country. Southern University also struggles to receive funding and new facilities, unlike the flagship university, LSU, located just down the river. LSU is burgeoning with new facilities while Southern is struggling for its survival.
On a summer bird hunt, Kenyon Kassaiuli, Jonah Andy, Larry Charles, and Reese John cross a flooded walkway in Newtok, Alaska. May 27th, 2019. The Yupik village of Newtok, Alaska, population 380, is sinking as the permafrost beneath it thaws. Erosion has already wiped out nearly a mile of Newtok’s land, and it is estimated that in three to five years it could be underwater. The entire village is in the process of moving to Mertarvik, a new village site about nine miles away. Newtok is the first community in Alaska that has already begun relocation as a direct result of climate change—pioneering a process that many other Alaskan villages may soon undergo.
After a successful hunt, Josiah Olemaun, a young whaling crew member takes a break from moving and stacking whale meat into his family’s ice cellar in Utqiagvik, Alaska. April 29th, 2018. Ice cellars are generations-old massive underground freezers dug deep into the permafrost. As permafrost thaws it is wreaking havoc, melting what used to be permanently frozen ground and destroying and flooding many ice cellars. Others have warmed up to a point that they are unusable, spoiling whale meat and other crucial hunted foods.
Esmeralda Garcia, Kali Cedeno, and Anthony Cedeno pose for a portrait in Destin, Florida. As humans continue to pollute the environment, our "sea level debt" grows. Sea level debt is the long-term sea level rise that we cannot avoid. In Destin, given current trends in pollution, 50% of the city will be underwater by the year 2070.
Construction begins on the Auberge Beach Residences & Spa in Fort Lauderdale-by-the-Sea. The residences, which feature the artwork of Fernando Botero, range from $1.5 million to $9 million. The streets of nearby Fort Lauderdale regularly flood during "king tides" and, according to Climate Central researcher Benjamin Strauss, "even if we could just stop global emissions tomorrow on a dime, Fort Lauderdale, Miami Gardens, and Hoboken, New Jersey will be under sea level."