Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumClimate peril we overlook has already arrived
By Nicholas Kristof / The New York Times
Our planet has just endured its hottest summer on record, with 2024 on track likewise to become the hottest year since recordkeeping began.
We see the impact of this heating in thousands of ways: The city of Phoenix this year endured 100 days of 100 degrees or hotter; some 1,300 Hajj pilgrims in Saudi Arabia reportedly died in the heat; Arctic ice is shrinking and far below average; and in some places, monkeys and bats have tumbled out of trees from the heat.
We tend to focus on the cataclysmic risks of climate change polar ice caps melting, seas rising dramatically, our planet becoming uninhabitable and those are real. But over the last couple of decades, weve accumulated evidence that the more mundane effects of heat are already upon us, impacting our daily lives. For example, more people fall off ladders on hot days than on cool days. They are more likely to die in those falls. They are also more likely to kill someone else.
Meanwhile, students learn less on hot days. They perform worse on exams. After a natural disaster, students are less likely to go to college. In other words, extreme weather damages far more than property, for it also is devastating to human capital.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/kristof-climate-peril-we-overlook-has-already-arrived/
Think. Again.
(17,930 posts)SamKnause
(13,802 posts)Too many feedback loops have been triggered.
Think. Again.
(17,930 posts)Clouds Passing
(2,267 posts)SupportSanity
(1,111 posts)If the dems don't win, we're toast. Almost literally.