【】

José Cerca left his lab on the University of California, Berkeley campus Wednesday evening, the fateful day Pacific Gas and Electric began intentionally cutting power to wide swathes of Northern California. Cerca, an evolutionary biologist working at school's Evolab, thought his workday was finished.
But then Cerca ran into his distressed boss who said, ominously, "We have to move everything."
The news came that PG&E's intentional blackouts — a new disaster strategy to limit catastrophic, climate change-enhanced fires during the state's notoriously windy fall season — would cause Berkeley's research laboratories to soon lose power. That's terrible news for biologists, many of whom freeze collections of specimens, cells, and genetic material.
"Imagine eight huge freezers with 30 years of organized research," explained Cerca, who recently joined the lab. "We have hundreds of thousands of spiders in vials organized."
Their lab had to move quickly. They were able to ship one large freezer (larger than a typical fridge) across the bay to San Francisco, and identified a building they were told had back-up power. Over the course of five hours they moved the frozen, arduously-collected archive of arthropods, many from the Hawaiian Islands.
"It's like me telling you to move all your furniture," Cerca said.
Tweet may have been deleted
Much of the Berkeley campus still lacks electricity. "We are without power to most buildings as of late last night [Wednesday]," Bob Sanders, the manager of science communications at Berkeley, said via email Thursday morning.
Fortunately, there is enough university-generated emergency power to supply electricity to essential freezers and refrigerators, Sanders said.
But there certainly isn't enough power for the campus to function. For the second day in a row, classes were canceled for the prestigious university's 43,201 students.
"It's like me telling you to move all your furniture."
Foreseeing power shortages, the school also arranged for trucks to ship invaluable, frozen research specimens from its labs across the bay to UC San Francisco, the school's sister campus, said Sanders. James Olzmann, an associate professor in the Department of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology, watched moving trucks load his lab's frozen cell collection.
"Moving trucks taking our -80 freezers to @ucsf because our @UCBerkeley building doesn’t have backup power and PG&E is shutting off the power (up to 5 days?!)," Olzmann tweeted on Wednesday afternoon.
Tweet may have been deleted
UC Berkeley appears to be taking the power loss quite seriously.
"While PG&E’s disconnection of the University of California, Berkeley campus from its transmission grid is enormously disruptive to our research enterprise, we are doing everything we can to protect our critical research assets," Randy Katz, the university's vice chancellor for research, said in a statement sent to Mashable. "Beyond life safety being our highest priority, the campus' highest research priority is to protect our research animals, then our experimental specimens, and finally our reagents."
It's unclear when the campus will have normal power again. "We may be up tomorrow, or we may not," said Sanders. "It's up to PG&E."
The utility's large-scale blackouts are a contentious climate adaptation. With relentlessly rising temperatures, already fire-prone California has grown increasingly parched, making it more likely to burn. The use of a hammer recently sparked the largest fire in Golden State history.
Tweet may have been deleted
Since 1972, the amount of land burned in California has increased fivefold. Overall in the Western U.S., today's fires burn for weeks longer than they did in the 1980s, and they're burning twice as much land than in the 1990s.
Following the nightmarish Camp Fire in 2018, which was by far the deadliest blaze in state history, PG&E is hellbent on avoiding future liability or catastrophe should its corroded, antiquated equipment fail and send sparks onto the dried-out ground. When there is potential for extreme fire weather, fueled by notoriously dry and hot winds, the utility may continue to cut power — which can mean some 2 million people, or more, go powerless.
It's a new, evolving, disaster mitigation strategy. And it emphasizes how, even in one of the wealthiest and most advanced economies in the world, civilization is ill-equipped for a warming climate.
SEE ALSO:U.N. confirms the ocean is screwed"Society is woefully unprepared for the impacts of climate change," Leah Stokes, who researches public policy and climate change at the University of California, Santa Barbara, told Mashable on Wednesday.
As for Cerca's lab specimens, he can only hope they're still frozen. The university has asked everyone to stay off-campus to avoid overloading the emergency power system.
Amid Wednesday's discord and surprise, he received mix-signals about whether the building where they stored frozen specimens had ample back-up power. But Cerca and his lab will soon learn how the arthropods faired.
"You know how chaos goes," he said.
相关文章
Did our grandparents have the best beauty advice?
Do our grandparents really know what's best?They're older and wiser, and they have no shortage of ad2025-06-16- 一個懶字已經毀掉了無數人的生活 ,因為懶,你會把衣服堆積起來,最後放進洗衣機一起洗掉;因為懶 ,你家冰箱從來沒有新鮮的蔬果 ,因為你從不自己做飯。為了改掉這個陋習,你需要跟著我一起學做一下香煎五香豬裏脊肉 。2025-06-16
【英超】索羅門、維尼修斯破門難救主,布倫特福德主場1球小勝富勒姆
【英超】索羅門、維尼修斯破門難救主 ,布倫特福德主場1球小勝富勒姆_足球 - 世界杯,歐洲杯,天下體育,足球 ,世界杯,籃球 ,羽球 ,乒乓球,球類, 棒球 ( 富勒,布倫特 )www.ty42.com 日2025-06-16- 癌症肆虐的今天,你是否也感到過害怕 。癌症這一可怕的疾病 ,為什麽離人類越來越近?飲食因素起到決定性的作用 。所以 ,遠離癌症 ,首先要做的就是健康飲食。而健康飲食的第一布,你需要自己在家做。下麵,就讓小編來給2025-06-16
Here's what 'Game of Thrones' actors get up to between takes
Warning: Contains some mild Season 6 spoilers right at the end (the video is spoiler-free).。LONDON -2025-06-16- 2023年馬來西來羽毛球公開賽--國羽2金1銀收官!_羽毛球 - 世界杯 ,歐洲杯,天下體育,足球,世界杯,籃球 ,羽球,乒乓球,球類, 棒球 ( 組合,決賽 )www.ty42.com 日期:20232025-06-16
最新评论