logo
How To Stay Cool In A Post-Climate World

How To Stay Cool In A Post-Climate World

Forbes2 days ago

A man cools himself with a garden hose during a heat wave.
Power grids from the Midwest to the Southeast have taken emergency action this week as an early-season heat dome brought an extended period of hot and humid weather to America's most populous region.
The science team at nonprofit news organization Climate Central found that climate change made the present spell of hot weather four to five times more likely.
The largest grid operator in the U.S., the Pennsylvania-New Jersey-Maryland (PJM) Interconnection, which coordinates the transmission of electricity to roughly 20% of the U.S. population in 13 states and the District of Columbia, issued an alert that power usage is likely to hit a 14-year high this week.
The alert advises electrical generation facilities to delay maintenance and repair outages due to the heavy load and informs clients that it will undertake 'demand response' initiatives through VPPs like Sonnen and Renew Home—companies which we have covered in this column.
The Interconnection, which maintains approximately 179 gigawatts of total generation capacity and nearly 8 GW of demand response capacity, anticipated a load of 160 GW—around 86% of its total capacity.
On Tuesday, the Department of Energy issued an emergency declaration for the Carolinas allowing Duke Energy to exceed pollution limits at its power plants to meet the load brought about by the heatwave.
While summer heatwaves are not unusual, this one came early in the season and is severe enough to prompt action by grid operators and the U.S. government.
The scientists at Climate Central have developed an online climate shift index application that calculates the increased likelihood of temperature extremes due to climate change. According to Climate Central's explanation, 'The Climate Shift Index (CSI) reveals how much climate change influences the temperature on a particular day. The index ranges from -5 to +5 with positive levels indicating temperatures that are becoming more likely due to climate change (negative scores indicate conditions that are becoming less likely). For levels at 2 or above, the Index is a multiple of how frequently a particular temperature will occur due to climate change.'
The CSI estimates the current Midwest and East Coast heatwave has been roughly four to five times more likely due to the effects of human-induced carbon cycle imbalances.
Climate Central's Climate Shift Index for the U.S. on June 24, 2025
This analysis highlights the extent to which climate change is already affecting our daily lives. I often hear people speculate as to climate change's effects on their children or grandchildren while overlooking the radical imbalance of the planet's carbon cycle already incurred by 150 years of burning fossil fuels.
Climate change's impacts on civilization are no longer abstract projections to be suffered by future generations; if we take the trouble to look for them, we find that those impacts have already arrived. We are living in a 'post-climate' world.
This week's early-season heatwave illustrates the vicious cycle in which we are now trapped. People crank up their air conditioning in rising temperatures. Utilities, straining to accommodate the additional power demand, crank up coal- and natural gas-burning facilities, releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, making the atmosphere more insulating, and further raising temperatures.
Now consider that this vicious cycle is playing out across the globe.
Climate Central's Climate Shift Index for the globe on June 24, 2025
Everyone living in the dark rust-colored parts of the map above is experiencing unseasonably hot weather made four to five times more likely due to climate change.
Outside of the U.S., many in those dark rust-colored areas live in developing countries with rapidly expanding urban areas subject to the urban heat island effect. People in developing countries are no less desperate for the relief of air conditioning than people on the East Coast of the U.S. and are increasingly able to afford this luxury.
There are ways to break out of this vicious cycle, but they are not simple. One featured earlier this month in this column is Dr. Lorenzo Kristov's proposal to shift power generation and distribution to regionally distributed self-reliant mini-grids. Another is reducing fossil fuel generation demand through energy efficiency improvements in homes and commercial buildings. Yet another is increasing the livability of underserved neighborhoods through tree planting and the establishment of energy-efficient community cooling centers.
One point that bears stating: Cutting funding to federal agencies like NOAA and the National Weather Service risks lives during extreme weather events and threatens the stability of our electrical grid.
The emergency measures taken by PJM and the Department of Energy this week were made possible by forecasts born from the hard work done daily at these agencies. Maintaining our government's capacity to understand how a changing climate will manifest itself through extreme weather events like heat domes and predicting these events before they occur is essential in this post-climate world.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Are beach umbrellas dangerous? How to secure your umbrella on the beach
Are beach umbrellas dangerous? How to secure your umbrella on the beach

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Are beach umbrellas dangerous? How to secure your umbrella on the beach

A day at the beach can quickly be ruined by an errant umbrella tumbling unpredictably across the sand and hitting someone. A recent incident in Asbury Park, New Jersey, brought this issue into the headlines. A lifeguard was impaled and hospitalized by an umbrella, which went through her shoulder, on June 25. She has been released from the hospital and is in recovery. What's happening at Delaware beaches: Running of the Bull and a lifeguard rescue It's a high-profile case of what is an avoidable injury most of the time. There are good ways to keep an umbrella from flying away and hitting and potentially severely injuring someone. Lean your umbrella into the direction of the wind. Even if you want to get some extra shade in the opposite direction, it is dangerous to angle it in a way where a wind gust can rip it out of the sand. Close your umbrella if you are leaving your spot. Unattended, open umbrellas can fly away with a wind switch. Dig it deeper than you think. If you're using a heavier umbrella made of wood or metal, it needs to be dug at least a foot under the sand. Sand is a loose and soft surface and is susceptible to collapse. The deeper the umbrella, the better. Use an umbrella anchor. These offer extra support for cheaper umbrellas especially. They operate as screws into the sand, which provides a stronger base and keeps the umbrella upright. These are easy to find wherever you get beach supplies. Put down your umbrella on very windy days. You will be plenty cool without the umbrella on a gusty day on the beach. If you really need the shade or cannot be in the sun, move to the boardwalk to find it. Catch your umbrella if it starts tumbling away. An umbrella doesn't get any slower once it gets rolling. You would rather run and catch it before it catches someone else. This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: How to keep your beach umbrella from becoming dangerous

Severe storm triggers hundreds of flight cancellations at busy Atlanta airport just as holiday travel cranks up
Severe storm triggers hundreds of flight cancellations at busy Atlanta airport just as holiday travel cranks up

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

Severe storm triggers hundreds of flight cancellations at busy Atlanta airport just as holiday travel cranks up

Hundreds of flights have been canceled at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport – the busiest airport in the world – after a severe storm overnight, just as a busy travel period ahead of the Fourth of July gets started. Over 450 flights into and out of Atlanta were canceled as of early Saturday afternoon, according to FlightAware. Hundreds more were delayed. Delta – which uses the Atlanta airport as its hub – is suffering the worst from cancellations, with 14% of the airline's total flights canceled, according to FlightAware. 'Severe weather overnight is causing delays and cancellations,' the airport said Saturday in a post on X, Powerful winds in Atlanta prompted the evacuation of most air traffic controllers from the control tower Friday evening, according to CNN affiliate WANF, citing the Federal Aviation Administration. A small crew stayed to handle inbound planes, reported WANF. Additionally, severe thunderstorms overnight brought quarter-inch hail to the city. More than 100 Delta aircraft require inspection before they're allowed to fly as a result, a Delta employee familiar with the situation told CNN as of late Friday evening. Delta's maintenance team was working 'quickly through the backlog,' the Delta employee said. There was also a ground stop in place Friday evening due to the severe weather, which limits inbound aircraft from taking off. The mounting delays come as millions of people prepare to travel for the Fourth of July. The AAA estimates that 72.2 million people will travel at least 50 miles or more from home during the holiday period, starting from Saturday, June 28, until Sunday, July 6, with 5.84 million travelers expected to fly to their destinations. The Atlanta airport expects to see 394,576 passengers over the holiday period, according to WANF. The Hartsfield-Jackson airport served over 100 million passengers in 2024, making it busier than London's Heathrow or the Dubai International Airport. CNN has reached out to the airport, Delta, and the FAA for more information. This is a developing story and will be updated.

Boil water advisory issued in New Orleans after 30″ main break
Boil water advisory issued in New Orleans after 30″ main break

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Boil water advisory issued in New Orleans after 30″ main break

NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — A precautionary boil water advisory is in effect for parts of New Orleans following a 30″ water main break that happened around 11 p.m. on Friday, June 28. According to the Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, the break happened in the 2600 block of Upperline Street, with crews isolating a portion of the affected area by around 1:45 a.m. on Saturday, and working to restore pressure in the Uptown area. Antoine Massey captured after New Orleans jailbreak The precautionary boil advisory will remain until samples are returned that demonstrate the water to be safe. The advisory spans the following areas: S Carrollton Avenue from S Claiborne Avenue to the river. S Claiborne Avenue from S Carrollton Avenue to Jackson Avenue. Jackson Avenue from S Claiborne Avenue to the river. Residents are asked to be careful not to swallow any water coming from the tap unless it has been boiled for a full minute. Anyone with questions can call trend already identified among 'Generation Beta' babies, BabyCenter claims Eight people shot within nine hours in New Orleans Two dead in Lower Ninth Ward homicide investigation Boil water advisory issued in New Orleans after 30″ main break How do the chemicals in sunscreen protect our skin from damage? Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store