Health officials: Heat caused more emergency department (ED) visits in several U.S. regions in 2023.
— CDC (@CDCgov) April 18, 2024
Read the full findings from this @CDCMMWR report: https://t.co/T4iGfcmSUn
Climate change damage could cost $38 trillion per year by 2050, study finds https://t.co/aBr7DDvUc3 pic.twitter.com/TBwT8m2mAP
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 17, 2024
Wildfires, drought, and extreme weather could push millions of Americans north—and in turn revitalize the Rust Belt, @AbrahmL writes: https://t.co/YmIHMVI1a5
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) March 28, 2024
Spring is getting warmer on average nationwide, per a recent Climate Central analysis — a trend that reflects human-caused warming, the climate research group says.https://t.co/4pIDPCPqGX
— Axios (@axios) March 18, 2024
Incredible chart: Spring really is coming earlier in most of the USA.
— Heather Long (@byHeatherLong) March 13, 2024
Less snow means the ground can absorb heat sooner. That's why trees and flowers are blooming earlier.
This explains why peak DC cherry blossom time is on track for ~March 23 now.
(Chart by @Harry_Stevens) pic.twitter.com/DpG8FmC8o0
Here’s how climate crashes into the economy: first, coastal properties/wildfire-risk properties become uninsurable; then, without insurance there aren’t mortgages for buyers; then, property values crash because no mortgages and cash-only becomes the market.https://t.co/ltBJYCevg7
— Sheldon Whitehouse (@SenWhitehouse) March 10, 2024
EXCLUSIVE: If Trump wins in November, his plans to roll back Biden's climate policies, could lead to an estimated extra 4 billion tonnes of CO2 emissions by 2030. https://t.co/67c0hS977J
— Axios (@axios) March 9, 2024
Republican-led states and industry groups filed three lawsuits challenging a US Environmental Protection Agency rule that toughens air quality standards for soot pollution https://t.co/zLlDyTUH5D
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 7, 2024