by: David A. Fahrenthold and Juliet Eilperin, The Washington Post
Climate change will have a "substantial" impact on human health in
the coming decades, making wildfires and hurricanes more likely, cooking up
more smog, and making summer heat waves longer, hotter and deadlier, according
to a new report today from the Environmental Protection Agency.
The report details how rising temperatures could slowly but significantly shift
the rhythms of nature that Americans are used to -- with disruptive, sometimes
even deadly, consequences. In the West, it found, changing weather patterns
could thin the snowpacks that feed rivers, with repercussions for both hydroelectric
dams and water supplies.
And, in Washington and other Eastern cities, it found that a warmer climate
will likely mean summers that start earlier, last longer and produce more periods
of sustained heat.
"It's going to be hotter, it's going to be hotter sooner in the year than
it was in the past," said Kristie L. Ebi, an adjunct professor at George
Washington University and one of the report's lead authors. She said that young
people living in the D.C. area now will notice a difference before they reach
middle age.
"They're going to look back and think about how nice the summers used
to be," Ebi said. "Within 20, 30 years, on average, the [public] should
notice that it's warmer."