What was the costliest disaster of 2021?
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 10, 2022
You guessed it: Hurricane #Ida. The Category 4 storm caused $75 billion in destruction, all the way from Louisiana to the Northeast. #BillionDollarDisasters pic.twitter.com/Xi4k3X2bdV
Among childless adults in the United States surveyed by Morning Consult last year, one in four cited climate change as a factor in why they do not currently have children.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) January 3, 2022
40 percent of Americans live in places that experienced a climate-related disaster in 2021 https://t.co/LL02b8wwbN
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 5, 2022
This year, in too many places, climate change made the weather not just too dry, but too wet—and no one had a plan for dealing with that, reports @KendraWrites: https://t.co/YclO3j3ECE
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) December 28, 2021
we can't take on climate change without addressing the US Pentagon, which is the *number one* institutional emitter of planet-heating pollution. me for @BostonGlobe.
— 𝕯𝖍𝖆𝖗𝖓𝖆 𝕹𝖔𝖔𝖗 (@dharnanoor) December 23, 2021
w/ @patrickmbigger @MejiaSouth @PPUtoday @lindsaykosh https://t.co/GMoC3BMQGo
What losing Build Back Better means for climate change (and why Joe Manchin’s ego and penchant for selling out—along with the disease of Republican science denial—jeopardizes our future) https://t.co/wrPz2WleF4
— Seth MacFarlane (@SethMacFarlane) December 21, 2021
Climate change has destabilized the Earth’s poles, putting the rest of the planet in peril https://t.co/exxfsahjDY
— JM Rieger (@RiegerReport) December 14, 2021
Arctic soared to an unprecedented 100 degrees in 2020, scientists confirm https://t.co/GhyAHsQ1Yw
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) December 14, 2021
“For a lot of our questions about climate change and tornadoes, the answer is we don’t know,” said Harold Brooks of NOAA. https://t.co/xkHJxFWF58
— NYT Climate (@nytclimate) December 14, 2021
No, its not too soon to point this out: "FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said it is preparing for severe weather events of similar magnitude.“ This is going to be our new normal & the effects that we’re seeing from #climatechange are the crisis of our generation,” she said
— Ronald Brownstein (@RonBrownstein) December 13, 2021
Climate misinformation online is mostly delivered through attacks on climate scientists and solutions, a study finds. https://t.co/COzAM6budo
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) December 13, 2021
First on CNN: New FEMA plan puts the climate crisis front and center after the Trump administration erased it https://t.co/RdRuugRdsE
— CNN Politics (@CNNPolitics) December 9, 2021