bookmark_borderPlymouth Meeting, PA and the Creation of the Climate Crisis

by Daniel Brouse

Train Derailment in Plymouth Meeting, PA

Hypothesis

The train derailment in Plymouth Meeting (July 17, 2023) and the seven people swept away by flood waters in Washington’s Crossing (July 15, 2023) were caused in part by our forefathers’ creation and contribution to climate change. In the 1600’s and 1700’s, the United States fostered worldwide freedom, abolition, revolution, war, finance, commerce, and industry. In 1688, the American forefathers created the cradle of human induced global warming in Plymouth Meeting, PA with the establishment of a limestone quarry and limekilns.

Limekilns are used to make quicklime by cooking limestone to 1,650 ℉. Quicklime is used in fertilizer, insecticides, tanning, mortar, plaster, high-grade steel, paper, and cement. Until the creation of the limekilns in 1688, colonists crushed oyster shells to create quicklime. The quicklime industry helped fund the American Revolution and the Underground Railroad.

Decomposing limestone (CaCO3) into quicklime (burnt limestone; CaO) releases significant CO2 emissions, both from the combustion of fuel needed to heat the kiln to temperatures over 1,000°C, and by the release of CO2 from the reaction itself (CaCO3 –> CaO + CO2). Because quicklime is a key ingredient in the production of cement, as well as being used in steel, pulp-and-paper and other industries, efforts are underway to reduce the carbon footprint of this operation. — Chemical Engineering / February 1, 2022

Plymouth Meeting

Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse: birthplace of the American Revolution
The Quaker Meetinghouse (located at the corners of Butler Pike and Germantown Avenue) is where the forefathers met to plan and carry out the creation of the USA.

Across the street…
The Underground Railroad: birthplace of Freedom in the USA
“As part of the Plymouth Meeting Anti-Slavery Society they held meetings in the Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse across the street from their home.”

Head north just a bit…
Limekilns: The cradle of commerce in the USA
“Remains of an industry that began in the village of Plymouth Meeting in 1688”
The original Made in America human influencer of climate change on an industrial scale.

If you head east a bit…
Old Corson Quarry: original mine for the limekilns and site of the train derailment
Before they discovered limestone in Plymouth Meeting, colonists had to crush oyster shells. The quarry is still in use today and was purchased by Highway Materials, Inc. in 1997.

Conclusion

On a weekend in July 2023, extreme rainfall caused flash flooding that resulted in:

  • seven drowning fatalities in Washington’s Crossing, PA
  • sinkholes to develop in the carbonate rock under the railroad tracks in Plymouth Meeting causing a train derailment

The deaths and damage to infrastructure were caused in part by the culture, economics, and “cradle of climate change” created in Plymouth Meeting in 1688. Limekiln Sign in Plymouth Meeting

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderMontgomery County Climate Change Risk Analysis

Montgomery County, Pennsylvania has released a climate change risk analysis for the county. The MONTGOMERY COUNTY CLIMATE CHANGE POTENTIAL VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS found:

Climate change is affecting the residents of Montgomery County. From record heat to intense storms, such as Hurricane Ida in 2021, Montgomery County is experiencing the impacts of climate change. Scientific studies show that our region will become increasingly hotter, and we will experience more intense and frequent storm events. Understanding the populations, places, and infrastructure that may be affected is critical for our communities as they adapt and become more resilient to climate change. To assist our stakeholders in gaining a better understanding of climate change and its effects, the Montgomery County Planning Commission (MCPC) has created the Montgomery County Climate Change Potential Vulnerability Analysis.

The Montgomery County Climate Change Potential Vulnerability Analysis is the county’s latest effort to address climate change. In 2007, Montgomery County completed Greenprint for Montgomery County: Climate Change Action Plan, a comprehensive greenhouse gas inventory along with a set of broad recommendations for action. The Montgomery County Commissioners formed the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Task Force and embraced a range of short- and mid-term greenhouse gas reduction targets. In 2015, the topic of sustainability and climate change was incorporated into the county comprehensive plan, Montco 2040: A Shared Vision. The county commissioners passed a resolution setting revised climate action goals in 2019. Most recently, the county partnered with Montgomery County municipalities to work on a Montgomery County Regional Climate Action Plan that will address the challenges highlighted in the Montgomery County Climate Change Potential Vulnerability Analysis.

Anthropological Climate Change and Pollution

bookmark_borderNew Jersey Properties at Risk to Flooding

Sea level rise is threatening the value of coastal real estate.

“Alarmingly, more than half of that (at-risk property) exposure is estimated to lie outside FEMA flood zones. That means those properties are at higher risk of being underinsured, and, therefore, the loans attached to them are at higher risk of impairment, with increased risk for the value of the related CMBS (securities).” —CFTC

“Fannie and Freddie carry about $5.6 trillion in assets, mainly home mortgages and related securities. Ultimately, taxpayers backstop the payments on loans under the agencies’ control, UCLA’s Yu explains. Their regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, issued a request for information in January, in part to assess flood risks. The entities require flood insurance that might mitigate their losses only on properties inside FEMA’s poorly drawn flood zones. Coverage limits imposed by NFIP — $250,000 for the structure and $100,000 for personal property — mean many coastal homes that have coverage are grossly underinsured.” — UCLA / Is the $1 Trillion Coastal Housing Market a Future Financial Crisis?

More on Flood Insurance and Real Estate Risk