Climate Tipping Point?
Estimated reading time: 0 minutes, 36 secondsRobinson Meyer in the Atlantic articulates that we may have reached the tipping point.
Nearly a third of Americans live in an area where a federal disaster occurred this summer, according to a new Washington Post analysis, and at least 64 percent of Americans suffered through a multi-day heat wave this year. Since June, more than 380 Americans have died in extreme weather events.
But we are not doomed.
Because it is Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, I am thinking of the teaching of the first-century rabbi Tarfon: “It is not your duty to finish the work, but neither are you at liberty to neglect it.”
Hottest Summer Ever
Estimated reading time: 0 minutes, 36 secondsThe average temperature during meteorological summer for the contiguous U.S. was 74.0 degrees F, 2.6 degrees above average. This technically exceeds the record heat of the 1936 Dust Bowl Summer, but the difference is extremely small (less than 0.01 of a degree F).*
A record 18.4% of the contiguous U.S. experienced record-warm temperatures. California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon and Utah each reported their warmest summer on record, as 16 other states had a top-five warmest summer on record.
Heat Dome
Estimated reading time: 0 minutes, 36 secondsSeventy-Two Hours Under the Heat DomebyJames Ross Gardner in The New Yorker details the impact of the Heat Dome on Portland and the Northwest this past summer.
The heat crisis occurred only as a result of a weak typhoon.
“Typhoon Champi caused no serious damage and no loss of human life. But a number of atmospheric scientists believe that it may be what gave the jet stream a snap. After the storm diminished, its force continued on, crimping the jet stream into a sharply curved band, or what meteorologists refer to as an omega block, because it resembles the Greek letter. This led to what’s called, colloquially, a heat dome, a high-pressure system in which hot air is trapped over a single geographic area. It stalled over British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon, sealing in the heat.”
When will take action to end the climate emergency?