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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe US faces more frequent extreme weather events, but attitudes and actions aren't keeping up
WASHINGTON (AP) After deadly flooding in central Texas in 1987, some thought theyd proven they could handle Mother Natures best punch. Then came this months horrific flash floods, when unfathomable amounts of rain fell in only hours and more than 100 people died.
Before 2021, the typically temperate Pacific Northwest and western Canada seemed highly unlikely to get a killer heat wave, but they did. Tropical Hawaii once felt an ocean away from drought-fueled wildfires, until it wasnt. And many in inland North Carolina figured hurricanes were a coastal problem until the remnants of Helene blew in last year.
Climate change is making extreme weather events more frequent and intense, according to climate scientists and government data. But people and governments are generally living in the past and havent embraced that extreme weather is now the norm, to say nothing about preparing for the nastier future thats in store, experts in meteorology, disasters and health told The Associated Press.
What happens with climate change is that what used to be extreme becomes average, typical, and what used to never occur in a human lifetime or maybe even in a thousand years becomes the new extreme, Princeton University climate scientist Michael Oppenheimer said. We start to experience things that just basically never happened before.
https://apnews.com/article/texas-floods-extreme-weather-attitudes-preparations-cc9d55c1f2440d78e01dcc65ec748112
cachukis
(3,675 posts)Ping Tung
(4,144 posts)
Passages
(3,986 posts)ananda
(34,453 posts)you can't see anything else, especially consequences.
kerry-is-my-prez
(10,207 posts)And it worked! A lot of people apparently do not believe their own lying eyes.
ExxonMobil, the worlds biggest oil company, knew as early as 1981 of climate change seven years before itbecame a public issue, according to a newly discovered email from one of the firms own scientists. Despite this the firm spent millions ($33 million) over the next 27 years to promote climate denial.
(The link below lists the 72 organizations it gave money to and the amounts)
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jul/08/exxon-climate-change-1981-climate-denier-funding