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After a four-year hiatus under the Trump administration, the Environmental Protection Agency’s Climate Change Indicators website is back in action. The public portal includes data on 54 indicators including sea-level rise, Great Lakes ice cover, heat waves, river flooding, and residential energy use. In tandem with the relaunch, the EPA released a report based on the data. The “disturbing account of the startling changes,” as the Washington Post wrote, includes:
Why This Matters: People are experiencing the impacts of climate change in their everyday lives, from hotter temperatures to more intense wildfire seasons. Creating an easy way for everyone to access climate data gives people a powerful advocacy tool. And it matters for the federal government to be transparent about the increasing, intersectional impact of the climate crisis. “We want to reach people in every corner of this country because there is no small town, big city or rural community that’s unaffected by the climate crisis,” Regan told reporters, as the Post writes. “Americans are seeing and feeling the impacts up close with increasing regularity.”
Diving into the Data
Beyond the headline-grabbing data points, here are other ways that the changing climate has been documented in the U.S.:
Birds on the move: About 300 common North American birds have shifted their wintering grounds an average of 40 miles north since 1966. Birds are also shifting their winter homes inland, where it’s usually colder than on the coast.
River flooding shifts: Depending on where you are in the country, river flooding may have become largest and more frequent (like in the Northeast) or decreased in size and frequency (like in the Southwest). Warming temperatures change evaporation patterns, snowmelt into streams, and rainfall, which all impact flood patterns.
Leafing and blooming: In the North and West, fall’s changing leaves and spring’s first blooms are coming earlier. An earlier spring has all sorts of impacts, including a longer growing season, more invasive species, and longer allergy seasons.
To Go Deeper: Check out the website, its new indicators, and the specific reports here.
By WW0 Staff For the United States, the post-Trump, pre-COP26 road to Glasgow has been paved with ambition and humility. In a major speech, the President’s Envoy, John Kerry, previewed the results of his climate diplomacy before heading into two weeks of intense deliberations of world leaders. Speaking at the London School of Economics — […]
Next week, the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow will draw hundreds of world leaders to Glasgow to determine the path forward five years after the Paris Climate Agreement (for a primer, read this) as new science underscores the urgency. The conference aims to squeeze countries to strengthen the commitments they’ve made towards securing global net-zero […]
By Amy Lupica, ODP Daily Editor In a report released last week, the Department of Defense (DOD) confirmed that existing risks and security challenges in the US are being made worse due to “increasing temperatures; changing precipitation patterns; and more frequent, intense, and unpredictable extreme weather conditions caused by climate change. Now, the Pentagon is […]
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