Unchecked Climate Change Will Make Life Hellish for Outdoor Workers: Report, 'Too Hot To Work'
- Mother Jones, Aug. 18, 2021. A new analysis forecasts the effect of global warming on labor. This story was originally published by HuffPost.
As temperatures in the Pacific Northwest soared above 110 degrees in late June, workers in Oregon flooded the states Occupational Safety and Health Division with safety complaints. In Klamath Falls, roofers worked in blistering heat and thick smoke from nearby wildfires with little to no shade and no breaks for a long period of time, one complaint read. At a job site in Clackamas, workers reportedly installed fencing without access to fresh water and with only a total of 35 minutes of breaks throughout the day.
The devastating heat wave, which killed more than 100 people in Oregon alone, offers a sobering glimpse at what lies ahead for outdoor laborers. Without an aggressive global effort to rein in greenhouse gas emissions, extreme heat will wreak havoc on construction, agricultural, extraction, delivery and other outdoor sectors, warns a new report from the Union of Concerned Scientists.
The report, published on Tuesday, concludes that if climate change continues unchecked, the number of days outdoor workers in the US are exposed to hazardous heat could quadruple by mid-century. Up to $55.4 billion in annual earnings would be put at risk. And it would come with dire inequitiesof the approximately 32 million outdoor workers in the United States, more than 40% are non-white. That US laborers are still suffering due to a lack of appropriate protections is nothing short of cruel, said Rachel Licker, the reports lead author and a climate scientist at UCS.
Thats often the tragedy with these injuries and deaths is that theyre typically preventable, she said. Its about affording people, oftentimes, basic human rightsaccess to shade, drinking water, the ability to take a break when theyre on the jobso theyre not in a position of having to choose between their health and a paycheck. The report, titled Too Hot to Work, builds upon the nonprofit advocacy organizations 2019 analysis on climate-fueled extreme heat...
More,
https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2021/08/climate-change-global-warming-heat-labor-outdoor-work/
PortTack
(34,643 posts)Thru most of the spring, summer and early fall
2naSalit
(92,669 posts)The Anza Borrego desert one summer, all activity like chores had to be done by sunrise. After that, it was time in the water, we had a pool at our disposal, and then lounge around until the sun went behind the mountains when things kind of cooled down a bit, time to put together the main meal of the day. Some days we would go to a shaded concrete slab and strip this car we needed all the parts from, it required a hose running water across the slab which we kept our feet in and put the tools and parts in to cool them off. It was interesting and hotter than I ever want to see again in my life.
2naSalit
(92,669 posts)Even with gloves, it's too hot to work.