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United States Earth Science

The US Could See a New 'Extreme Heat Belt' By 2053 (nbcnews.com) 122

An "extreme heat belt" reaching as far north as Chicago is taking shape, a corridor that cuts through the middle of the country and would affect more than 107 million people over the next 30 years, according to new data on the country's heat risks. From a report: The report, released Monday by the nonprofit research group First Street Foundation, found that within a column of America's heartland stretching from Texas and Louisiana north to the Great Lakes, residents could experience heat index temperatures above 125 degrees Fahrenheit by 2053 -- conditions that are more commonly found in California's Death Valley or in parts of the Middle East.

The projections are part of First Street Foundation's new, peer-reviewed extreme heat model, which shows that most of the country will have upticks in the number of days with heat index temperatures above 100 degrees over the next 30 years as a result of climate change. The heat index represents what a temperature feels like to the human body when humidity and air temperature are combined. It is commonly referred to as the "feels like" temperature. "Everybody is affected by increasing heat, whether it be absolute increases in dangerous days or it's just a local hot day," said First Street Foundation's chief research officer, Jeremy Porter, a professor and the director of quantitative methods in social sciences at the City University of New York.

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The US Could See a New 'Extreme Heat Belt' By 2053

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  • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @03:31PM (#62791894) Homepage Journal

    Trying to get things off on a constructive angle, but when you think about climate change from the earth's perspective, it's no big thing. The problem is that people are tiny. A minor shift of rain from here to there isn't going to bug the planet much, but for the people who live in the first place it becomes a horrible drought while the folks in the second place are being flooded out.

    Technical solution? MUCH better weather and climate modeling, at least for understanding the scope of the problems. But in the meantime at least we could make a few more efforts to avoid making things worse... But given the lag times, I don't see much basis for optimism within my lifetime. Or within the lifetimes of the grandchildren of anyone who is alive now.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. This will take a few hundred years to deal with. Climate changes _slowly_ and the next centuries will be really messed up on this dirtball.

      • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @04:20PM (#62792034)

        "Climate changes _slowly_ " in the past. The amount of carbon we've dumped into the atmosphere makes slow change unlikely.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I was obviously referring to man-made changes happening slowly on a time scale relevant to humans. A change over 100 years does qualify as "slowly" in that regard. Yes, the _start_ of those 100 years lies quite a while in the past and so we are currently seeing the first small and still pretty harmless (relatively to what is to come) effects. I am well aware that _natural_ changes happen on much much longer time-scales.

          • Ever heard of tipping points? Can you see how extreme weather has intensified dramatically in only a couple of decades? Wait till methane starts leaking out in volume.
            • Ever heard of tipping points? Can you see how extreme weather has intensified dramatically in only a couple of decades? Wait till methane starts leaking out in volume.

              Sounds like now is the time to start investing in air conditioning stocks and companies!!

    • by werepants ( 1912634 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @06:08PM (#62792147)

      Trying to get things off on a constructive angle, but when you think about climate change from the earth's perspective, it's no big thing. The problem is that people are tiny. A minor shift of rain from here to there isn't going to bug the planet much, but for the people who live in the first place it becomes a horrible drought while the folks in the second place are being flooded out.

      It's "no big thing" in the sense that the asteroid impact that killed the dinosaurs was "no big thing". Is it going to destroy all life on earth? No. Will it impact the existence of the planet as a lump of rock floating through space? No. But are we trending towards the worst extinction event in all of geological history? Yep.

      The fossil record shows us multiple catastrophic events that have culminated in the extinction of over 90% of species on Earth. Not the death of 90% of animals, mind you, but the outright extinction of the actual species. Pick 10 animals out of a hat and 9 of them don't exist any more. And, chances are, the ones that survive are going to be the prolific pests and scavengers, things like cockroaches or little scurrying rodents. From the planet's perspective, if that's not a "big thing", I don't think anything else qualifies.

      If we look at the current rate of extinctions, and the rate of change in climate, the current period we're living through is on track to cause more extinctions, in less time, than anything before it. Of course, not all of that is climate related... some if it is due to habitat destruction, pollution, and good old hunting things into oblivion, but the general trend is clear - the stuff we're doing is as bad or worse for our ecosystem as an ice age or a massive asteroid impact.

      • If true then perhaps our elected officials can lead by example. Instead of US senators flying home from DC every weekend to their home districts, only to fly back to DC for more debates, they could work from home. Or just stay in DC until the end of the legislative session.

        If this is a "climate crisis" then our elected officials need to act like it. Such as not attaching billions of dollars of spending for IRS agents to a bill that is supposed to lower CO2 emissions, which gives half of Congress a reason

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Sad ACK to both comments, though I'm not sure I was sufficiently clear about the reference of "tiny" in the title. That's the earth's perspective and it would include all of the prior extinction events and meteorite strikes since the "big one" (if you accept the theory that the moon was chipped off the earth).

          And I was also a bit sloppy in anthropomorphizing the earth. (I don't accept any of those theories of the earth's special sentience.)

    • The planet is not alive. It has no perspective.

      The earth's ecology is big. It's going to suffer extreme damage... many species will go extince... humans may be driven to war... which could lead to extinction of all or almost all multi-cellular land species for a long time.

    • Save the planet? No need to. The planet is fine, it's the people who're fucked.

      --George Carlin

  • by kiviQr ( 3443687 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @03:40PM (#62791912)
    .... so that is only 20 years after nuclear fusion ... we should be fine
  • by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @04:05PM (#62791990)

    Too much happening too soon. You can't scare anybody any more with predictions 30 years out. Nor can you spur action.

    Half the world is baking NOW. None of those people could give a flying fuck about 2053.

    • Half the world is baking NOW. None of those people could give a flying fuck about 2053.

      Yep, half the people are so stupid, they're stupider than the other half!

      It seems to me that logic would dictate that if something didn't used to be a problem, and now it is a problem, that that would cause them to be concerned about it getting worse. But your hypothesis, that people are dumb as rocks, is probably more likely.

      • Well, I meant that this people gave more immediate fish to fry, so to speak.

        However, I don't disagree with you.

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        Yep, half the people are so stupid, they're stupider than the other half!

        To quote the immortal George Carlin: Think of how stupid the average person is and then realize that half of them are stupider than that.

  • by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @04:08PM (#62791998)
    We are looking at climate changes in (c) 2050 that just a few years ago were assumed to happen around 2100. The models are showing 3+ degree c change, but In all reality, we're looking at a 4+ degree C change. That much change creates a wide swath of unlivable globe. As humans are compressed the upper and lower regions, the globe will only sustain a greatly reduced population. http://www.climatecodered.org/... [climatecodered.org]
    • Then I guess eco-activists will finally get what they've really wanted all along: mass human deaths and a huge reduction in human populations.

      I mean, let's stop bandying about the point: this is the only way anthropic burdens on the planet are going to meaningfully decrease.

      So I guess it's victory for you guys?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I know a lot of 'eco-activists'. Some feel that the earth is over populated, but I've never met a single one that wants mass death. In actuality, they seem to be quite caring people. Your characterisation is quite the strawman.
      • It’s a victory for the corporate oligarchy who’ve lied, bought politicians, besieged the legal system, and plundered and poisoned the plant in the name of short time profit. The very few who live in unimaginable spender at the expense of us and the future. They have been outstandingly successful at hiding the truth and convincing an army of naysayers to hand their souls to the devil of profit.
        Only a ghoul or sociopath would revel in the extinction of others, potentially a species. The real
    • Well, shit! We need to do something!

      When this keeps going, the whole shit hits the fan around 2035, and I plan to still be alive at that time, 2050, that was far away and I was probably dead by then, so I didn't give a shit.

      • Well I have kids and grand kids, so I DO give a shit. Too bad you lost your humanity somewhere.
        • I lost it when I saw people with kids and grandkids cruise around in SUVs to pick up their mail from the box down the road. Then I started to wonder why I, someone without kids driving a hybrid, still care.

  • Will get American Jesus to save them from their own poor stewardship!
  • by dark.nebulae ( 3950923 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @04:17PM (#62792018)

    They will just chalk this up as another fake news story by coastal elites trying to scare the "flyover" country into believe the totally fake climate change and other wokeness.

    And to prove you wrong, in 2053 when they go outside in winter and see snow, all of your talk of climate change and "heat belt" will be proven to be the lies that you are trying to sow...

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      That's a hell of a crapshoot you have planned.

      You: Gee, I know, let's wait and see if it happens. If not, we won!!

    • Please explain to me the logic behind this. I mean, there are only 4 things that can happen.

      Climate change isn't real and we don't do jack. Then nothing happens.
      Climate change isn't real and we act as if it was. Then nothing happens.
      Climate change is real and we act to counter it. Then nothing happens.
      Climate change is real and we don#t do jack. Then we're totally screwed.

      Is it me or is there only one outcome that is really, really bad and we should try to avoid at all cost?

      • Your first item is wrong. The

        It isn't real and we don't do jack means nothing happens

        is wrong. If you only believe climate change is fake when it is actually fact, then it should be

        I believe climate change isn't real when in fact it is and we don't do jack, then we're totally screwed.

        • The argument is that, even if climate change wasn't happening, it's sensible to not gamble on that.

          • No, I get your argument and totally agree. If climate change is not real but we act as though it is, our actions will not have an effect.

            I contend, though, that the first premise, climate change is not real and doing nothing changes nothing, this is based on a fact that climate change is not real.

            However, if in the light of all of the science, the increased heat and droughts and extreme weather events, that some people are climate change deniers, they may believe that climate change is not real and doing no

  • I think we're entitled to laugh at these people.

    That "heat belt" is exactly the same shape as states that have voted for Republicans and climate change denial for the last 30 years.

    You have been warned about this.

    You were told it was coming. You were told it was going to be bad. You were told that it was going to cause disruption to your lives. That it would cause famine, disease and plagues. You were told that you had time to turn it around, but it was going to be costly.

    But no.

    No, you didn't want to s

    • Yep, we were warned. But instead of destroying the middle class and impoverishing a few generations of our children, we instead decided that we'd rather have a longer summer like our southern neighbors, and shorter winters. Our kids can learn to tolerate 100+ degree temperatures. After all, we did.

      In Wisconsin, the joke is that summer is two weeks long. In Illinois, the summer realistically lasts for about 3 months. In Tennessee, it's closer to 9 months. If climate change makes Wisconsin summers la

  • by Anonymous Coward

    But just keep driving all of those forever-getting-bigger SUVs and Pickup Trucks. The bigger the better, the more gas used the better. Pedal to the metal.

  • LOL... The earth has been hotter, it's been MUCH colder (ice age pretty much stopped where I live...nothing but ROCKS if you dig into the ground).
    • Things can get a lot worse a lot faster than you think. Source: Things are getting a lot worse a lot faster than the formal projections that were already scary. In large part this is specifically because the additional releases of methane were dramatically underestimated. What other effects are being under-anticipated?

  • The paper I see linked to this article discusses North Carolina only.

    Helluva bad Slashdot summary if it's the correct article.

    • You simply didn't understand how the science is done, and what was linked to.

      The North Carolina data model has been singled out for study not just in one paper, but across this field, and many fields that use GIS data in their research. This allows better checking of models, compared to everybody using their own local GIS data. The linked scientific study is about a model, and in the scientific paper the model is applied to this standard data set. The story, and the linked article, is about what the model s

      • What part of the linked paper talks about extrapolating to a larger area? Also the term âoeheat beltâ doesnt even exist in the paper.

        The article is alarmist shite and certainly not peer reviewed.

        • You did not correctly parse the words you're replying to.

          Keep parsing until they make sense, and say something intelligent and informative. Until then, you're just not listening well.

  • This is a computer simulation of some potential future of weather patterns based on a lot of assumptions that may not be true. Before someone screams "weather is not climate" I suggest looking up how climate is defined. Climate is defined as as the prevailing weather conditions in an area over a long period of time. Weather is the climate, but not one weather event defines the weather for all time.

    There's "climate fatigue" setting in, and after something like 50 years of screaming about climate change th

    • An addendum. This is an example on how the "deniers" think:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      The video starts with questioning the motives of the people screaming about a "climate crisis", people demanding they be handed money and control to avert the crisis. It takes until 22 minutes in for an alternative solution to be offered so hang on until the end.

      If the solution is less money, less freedom, less energy, less food, then expect people to push back. Offer prosperity, abundance, and comfort and everyon

  • The 2023 projections is pretty far off from now. How many of these computer models have been accurate so far? Before you think I am a climate denier, I am not. I just do not trust the b.s. artists who constantly tell us what the models say will happen that as of yet have never happened.
  • by CmdrPorno ( 115048 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @10:43PM (#62792677)

    We are going to have the MOST EXTREME heat you've ever imagined! Everyone agrees! It's going to be tremendous! We're going to make the sun GREAT again!

  • Like that Covidâ"19 came from bat soup ---- same peers??? And this Porter dude is a "social scientist" ----- not a physicist of the air??? Riiiiggghhht . .
  • You mean the house is on fire? You saying that humanities eco balance is abysmal and we need a turnaround? ... I'm shocked!

    Jokes aside: We are screwed. We are 5 decades to late in getting an eco turnaround going. The result being that we will have damages that will be with us for a few centuries at least, not counting the 6th extinction that's happening right now. This is undisputed common knowledge and has been for decades. How hard we are screwed however is up to us.... I certainly hope that with stuff

  • So what will be done with info ? What chages can be made ahead of this ? The 7 states that share water from the Colorado river can't even agree to new sharing agreement. They will wait until it's too late and there will no winners or water !
  • What aboutism denial. Consumerism. Four delivery trucks passing your house every day (Amazon, UPS, FedEx, US Mail). Induced demand from Ride-share and Delivery apps. Raising beef using 27x the land needed for Chicken. We are not going to change. People cared for a brief moment in 1976 and then Regan.

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