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Warming Planet Means More Dangerous Hot Days

“Extreme heat events already cause more deaths in a typical year than any other weather event, and climate change is causing more extreme heat days. So it’s important to understand we can reduce heat deaths and heat illness by taking common sense steps,” said Linda Rudolph, director of PHI's Center for Climate Change and Health, in response to a new report from the Natural Resources Defence Council on extreme heat days. Rudolph participated in a press call for the report's release, saying public health infrastructure needs to be strengthened to prepare for more dangerous hot days.

If Florida’s steamy summers feel like they’re getting hotter, that’s because they are, according to a new report.

In a review of temperatures from more than 3,000 weather stations nationwide, the Natural Resources Defense Council found the number of days with “extreme heat” — when searing temperatures trigger health concerns — is increasing. During average Florida summers, more than 14 days hit the mark.

About 94 percent of the state’s population — more than 18 million people — live in areas that recorded extreme heat days, according to the report. Nationwide, 210 million Americans live in places where dangerously sweltering days can occur.

“It gave us a sense of the way the past is no longer the present,” NRDC senior scientist and deputy director Kim Knowlton said in a press call. “Temperatures locally are really changing.”

The data, which compared records from the last decade to temperatures recorded between 1961 and 1990, also provides a glimpse at what the sunshine state, and hottest parts of the country, can expect from a warming planet.

Since 1895, temperatures nationally have risen on average about 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit, with most of that occurring after 1970, the report said. If carbon emissions continue at the current pace, average temperatures are expected to rise between 5 and 10 degrees. Florida could see a 9-degree increase in average temperatures by 2100, the report said.

That increase is expected to produce more than just aggravation. Extreme heat days are tied to a slew of illnesses, especially among the old and very young. This year, Irma provided a tragic example of how dangerous stifling heat can be when 14 residents at a Hollywood nursing home died after the hurricane knocked out power to the facility’s air conditioner.

“Extreme heat events already cause more deaths in a typical year than any other weather event,” said Dr. Linda Rudolph, director of the Center for Climate Change and Health at the nonprofit Public Health Institute. “And climate change is causing more extreme heat days. So it’s important to understand we can reduce heat deaths and heat illness by taking common sense steps.”

This is not the first time Florida has appeared high on the list of places expected to be hit by rising temperatures. Last year, a similar report by Climate Central put Florida first among states likely to experience a dangerous combination of heat and humidity — driving heat index temperatures to 104 degrees — under climate change predictions.

That report also ranked Miami first in the number of days expected to top 90 degrees across the nation.

This year also set new records for high temperatures across Florida and the Southeast, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Read the rest of the article in the Miami Herald.

 


 

Dr. Rudolph’s commentary was also included in the following reports:

Originally published by The Miami Herald


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