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Date: Sat, 5 Aug 2006 09:33:41 -0400
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Subject: Hot Enough Yet?

http://select.nytimes.com/2006/08/03/opinion/03herbert.html
New York Times
August 3, 2006

Op-Ed Columnist

Hot Enough Yet?

By Bob Herbert

The heat wave burned its way east from California,
where it killed more than 100 people. It
moved relentlessly across the nation's midsection,
sparking record-high temperatures in state after state,
mimicking a heat wave that killed more than 700 people
in the Midwest in 1995.

For the past couple of days it has tormented the East
Coast, draining power systems and creating a hellish
environment for the frail and infirm, and especially for
the elderly poor struggling to survive without the
blessings of air-conditioning.

You can't blame any single weather event on global
warming. But with polar bears drowning because they
can't swim far enough to make it from one ice floe to
another; with the once-glorious snows of Kilimanjaro
about to bring down the final curtain on their long,
long run; with the virtual disappearance of Lake Chad in
Africa, which was once the size of Lake Erie, it may be
time to get serious about trying to slow this
catastrophic trend.

(It's also time to aggressively counter the dangerous
nonsense of people like Senator James Inhofe, the
Oklahoma Republican who has been openly contemptuous of
the idea that human activity has contributed to global
warming, and Senator Conrad Burns, a Montana Republican
whose head has always had the habit of migrating to
extremely peculiar places, in this instance into the
very hot sand.

(Senator Inhofe has said that "man-made global warming
is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American
people." Senator Burns, according to a publication
called "Environment and Energy Daily," shrugged the
matter off completely, saying: "You remember the ice
age? It's been warming ever since, and there ain't
nothing we can do to stop it.")

As I'm writing this, the lights have been dimmed in much
of The New York Times Building, in accordance with the
request of Mayor Michael Bloomberg that New Yorkers
conserve as much energy as possible. The temperature in
the city is right around 100 degrees.

It's certainly true that heat waves in July and August
are not unusual. But we need to keep in mind that the
first six months of this year were the warmest ever
recorded in the United States. And that this summer,
according to the National Climatic Data Center, more
than 50 cities in the continental U.S. have set records
for high temperature.

We should keep in mind, as Al Gore has pointed out, that
of the 21 hottest years ever measured, 20 have occurred
within the last 25 years. And the hottest year of this
recent hottest wave was last year.

Those who are familiar with the cold and fog of the Bay
Area in northern California should consider the
following summation of the latest heat wave from
Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle: "In northern
California, it was hotter for longer than ever on
record, hitting 110 degrees four consecutive days in the
nine-county Bay Area."

There's more. Seth Borenstein, the science writer for
The Associated Press, reported yesterday that in recent
years, the U.S. has had more than three times its normal
share of extremely hot summer nights. "That is a
particularly dangerous trend," Mr. Borenstein wrote.
"During heat waves, like the one that now has a grip on
much of the East, one of the major causes of heat deaths
is the lack of night cooling that would normally allow a
stressed body to recover."

Referring to the spike in nighttime temperatures,
Richard Heim, a research meteorologist at the climate
center, said in the article: "This is unbelievable.
Something strange has happened in the last 10 to 15
years."

Unlike Senator Burns, there are people who understand
that there are things we can do to mitigate the worst
effects of global warming. We'd better do something
fast. We're no longer waiting for the tragedies
predicted to result from extremely high temperatures,
extreme weather events, storm surges and so forth. We're
already enduring them.

Remember New Orleans? And the thousands who died from
the heat in Chicago and elsewhere in the Midwest in
1995? And, as incredible as it still seems, the 35,000
killed by a monster heat wave in Europe in 2003?

I think the single most effective thing most ordinary
Americans could do to become more informed about global
warming - and the steps we need to take to fight it - is
to go see Al Gore's movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," and
read his book of the same title.

It would be a shame if it turns out that Americans have
been so deprived of leadership for so long that they
fail to recognize it when it's offered to them.

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

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