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Climate Change Archive

Archives for July 2023

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
The hottest month on the planet was extra brutal in Phoenix.

Temperatures hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit in Phoenix for 31 days in a row. The record-smashing heat has crowded hospitals with patients struck with heat illness or who burned themselves on scorching hot pavement. July is expected to go down as the planet’s hottest month on record, and North America’s heatwaves this month would have been virtually impossible without climate change.

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
Deep sea mining negotiations stalled again.

The deep sea is an untapped source of battery materials. But world leaders missed a July deadline to craft regulations on deep sea mining. Since so little is known about marine life at those depths, Scientists warn that exploiting those resources would be disastrous — especially without international regulations in place. The International Seabed Authority was scheduled to discuss a potential moratorium on deep-sea mining during a meeting last week, but ultimately pushed talks to 2024.

Jacob Kastrenakes
Jacob Kastrenakes
Home solar is very cool... and very hard to figure out.

Marques Brownlee got a top-of-the-line Tesla system installed in his home to figure out the costs, benefits, and quirks of it all. He found huge fluctuations season to season, which mostly washed out over the course of the year.

The end result was a very high-tech and nearly cost-free home electricity system... it’s just going to take a while to pay itself off.

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
This is probably the planet’s hottest month on record.

After kicking off the with the hottest week ever recorded, July is on track to be the hottest month on the books, according to the World Meteorological Organization. It’s probably the hottest month in about 120,000 years, Associated Press reports. Heatwaves affecting North America and Europe this July would have been “virtually impossible” without climate change, a recent study found. Climate change also made a severe heatwave in China this month 50 times more likely.

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
Heat is a new ‘hazard’ for workers.

Joe Biden asked the Department of Labor today to issue a first-ever ‘Hazard Alert’ for heat. The move comes after UPS and Amazon employees demanded protections from sweltering work conditions. The Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) started the rulemaking process for a federal heat standard to protect workers back in 2021. This week, farm workers and Congress members urged OSHA to finalize and implement the rule.