PRESS RELEASE
August 25, 2009
NEW YORK CITY & BUFFALO AMONG CITIES AT RISK IN HEAT
WAVES REPORT
More Extremely Hot Days
Projected Due to Global Warming; 30 Cities Especially
Vulnerable
(ALBANY, NY)—New York City and
Buffalo are on a list of those cities most vulnerable to
heat wave effects as the planet warms according to a new
report from the National Wildlife Federation and Physicians
for Social Responsibility. The cities’ relatively high
levels of vulnerable populations and low rates of air
conditioning are among the reasons cited by the groups. New
York City ranked in the top tier and Buffalo ranked in the
second among the most vulnerable cities.
Click here to read the report.
“Buffalo and New York City need to be ready for more
frequent and stronger heat waves and deteriorating air
quality because of global warming, because heat waves have
serious implications for the most vulnerable among
us—children, seniors, the sick and the poor,” said Jackson
Morris, air & energy program director with Environmental
Advocates of New York. “More air pollution and oppressive
temperatures will translate into increased risk of heart
attacks, strokes and asthma attacks. More
Extreme Heat Waves: Global Warming’s Wake-Up Call is an
urgent call for immediate legislative action to reduce
climate pollution at the state and federal levels.”
To explain the bigger picture and provide recommendations
for how to cope with projected changes and how to avoid the
worst impacts of global warming, More Extreme Heat Waves:
Global Warming’s Wake-Up Call details how:
-
Global warming will bring extreme heat
waves
-
Urban air pollution could be exacerbated
by extreme heat
-
Heat
waves disproportionately impact the most vulnerable
among us, the poor, elderly, children, and those who
have asthma or heart disease or live in big cities
-
Natural
habitats and agriculture are also vulnerable to heat
waves
-
We can
reduce the severity of heat waves and their impacts on
vulnerable people
“Global warming is one of the gravest health emergencies
facing humanity. It’s life-threatening and it’s affecting us
now,” said Dr. Peter Wilk, MD, executive director,
Physicians for Social Responsibility. “The science confirms
that the frequency and duration of heat waves has increased
significantly over the last 50 years. In the United States,
heat waves already kill more people during a typical year
than floods, tornadoes and earthquakes combined. Given these
worsening trends, taking decisive action to stop global
warming becomes a medical necessity.”
While the data show indisputable warming over the past
several decades, cooler-than-average temperatures across the
Midwest and Northeast in summer 2009 make it easy to lose
sight of this long-term trend. According to the most recent
science on heat waves, this temporary respite is due largely
to natural climate oscillations working in our favor. “We
are nearing the end of a minimum in the 11-year solar cycle
during which the Earth is receiving slightly less heat from
the Sun,” Amanda Staudt, National Wildlife Federation
climate scientist, explained. “At the same time, the jet
stream took an unusually southern track across the nation
this summer, bringing more Arctic air and less tropical air
to the Midwest and Northeast. These sorts of natural
variations will continue to take place as the climate warms.
When it comes to heat waves, communities need to prepare for
the years when the natural variations line up in the
opposite way: a year with maximum solar heating, a northward
shift in the jet stream, and global warming could add up to
record hot weather, Staudt explained. Furthermore, while it
has been pleasantly cool in some parts of the country, the
South and the West have been sweltering. At the end of June,
numerous daily temperature records were equaled or broken in
Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. In late July, the Pacific
Northwest had an extreme heat wave as a high pressure
weather system stalled overhead.
From New York to Los Angeles, the report details 30 large
U.S. cities where major risk factors associated with
heat-related mortality make residents especially vulnerable
to heat waves:
-
Number of
oppressively hot days each year
-
Fraction of homes without
central air conditioning
-
Ground-level ozone
pollution
-
City population living in
poverty
“When the thermometer goes up, when the waters rise, our
communities are most at risk, said Benjamin Todd Jealous,
president & CEO of the NAACP. “There is a climate gap in our
country. Black Americans, other people of color and the poor
are disproportionately impacted on by the consequences of
global warming.”
“The effects of extreme heat waves are, unfortunately, a
deadly serious reality here in Louisiana,” said Jerome Ringo,
past chair, National Wildlife Federation and president of
the Apollo Alliance. “This became personal when an associate
of mine here recently lost his life due to the effects of
extreme heat.”
“We need to take these trends toward more extreme heat waves
into account when designing urban areas and public health
programs,” said Dr. Staudt. “We can no longer plan based on
the climate we used to have.”
"Certainly vulnerable populations will suffer earliest and
most from the heat waves global warming is causing, and
clearly it’s time for us to consider the public health
implications we'll face, but a lot more of us are going to
become vulnerable and ill if we don't work to reduce what
we're doing to warm the planet,” stated Dr. Cindy L. Parker,
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Let's be
honest: We cannot simply adapt to ever-rising temperatures.
We have to do all we can to keep those temperatures from
soaring past our ability to cope. This is not just a wake-up
call; it’s a call to action."
Important steps to reduce the risks include curbing global
warming pollution to minimize future extreme heat waves,
making cities cooler and greener, implementing public health
measures that reduce the impact of extreme heat waves, and
safeguarding wildlife, fish and habitats from extreme heat.
National Wildlife
Federation
is America's conservation organization inspiring Americans
to protect wildlife for our children’s future.
Immediate
Release: August 25, 2009
Contacts:
Aileo Weinmann,
communications manager, 202-797-6801,
weinmanna@nwf.org
Tony Iallonardo, senior communications manager,
202-797-6612,
iallonardot@nwf.org
Erica Ringewald, communications director, 518-210-9903,
eringewald@eany.org
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