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New Report: Temperatures Up in Houston
AUSTIN—As the presidential candidates prepare to discuss
some of the most important issues facing our country at their final debate tonight,
Environment Texas released a new report documenting that the average
temperature in the Houston
area in 2007 was 1.5°F above the historical average. The year 2007 tied for the
second warmest year on record globally and was the 10th warmest year
on record in the United
States.These record temperatures are part of a trend toward rising temperatures
resulting from global warming.
“Throw out the record books
because global warming is raising temperatures in Texas and across the
country,” said Luke Metzger, Director of Environment Texas “While one or two degrees may not seem like
much, just as any parent with a sick child knows, even a small rise in
temperature can have a big effect,” he continued.
According to NASA, seven of
the eight warmest years on record globally have occurred since 2001.These above-average temperatures led
Environment Texas to more closely examine recent temperature trends at the
local level.
“Feeling the Heat: Global Warming and Rising
Temperatures in the United States” compares
government temperature data for the years 2000-2007 with the historical
average, or “normal,” temperature for the preceding 30 years, 1971-2000. Our data were collected at 255 weather
stations – those with the highest quality data – in all 50 states and Washington, DC.
Key findings for Houston include:
•In 2007, the
average temperature was 1.5°F above normal in Houston.
•Houston’s above-average temperatures in 2007 are part of a
warming trend.Between 2000 and 2007,
the average temperature was 1.3°F above the historical average in Houston. Nationally, the
average temperature during this eight-year period was at least 0.5°F above
normal at nearly 90 percent of the weather stations.
•Over the course
of 2007, Houston
experienced 107 days where the temperature hit at least 90°F, which is 7 days more
than the historical average.Extreme
heat can have serious implications for human health, causing heat stroke, heat
exhaustion, and even death.
According to the Texas state
climatologist, average temperatures for the first half of 2008 were also well
above normal. From January to June of 2008, average temperatures were 2.1°F
above normal in Houston.
The state climatologist has said that while Texas temperatures are quite variable, they
are “ominously climbing recently”.
The Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change – the prestigious United Nations body that won a Nobel Prize
last year for its work – has concluded the evidence of global warming is
“unequivocal” and that human activities are responsible for most of the
increase in global average temperatures.Burning fossil fuels to power cars, homes, and industry produces most U.S.
global warming emissions.
A recent Bush administration
report said “it is very likely” that more people will die in the United States
during extremely hot periods in the future.In addition, the report identified more powerful tropical storms,
extreme rainfall with flooding, sea level rise, wildfires, heat waves, and
drought as particular risks for the Houston
region.
Energy issues have featured
prominently in both presidential and vice-presidential debates this election
season.“We’re at a crossroads on
energy, and it’s up to the next President to choose a new path that curbs
global warming and helps recharge our struggling economy,” said Metzger.
“It’s clear that our energy
crisis isn’t just hurting us at the pump, but it’s also causing Texans to feel
the heat.The good news is that
repowering America
with wind and solar power will curb global warming, and clean, renewable energy
is one of the few bright spots in our troubled economy,” said Metzger.
According to the latest
climate science, the United
States and the world must break its
dependence on fossil fuels and transition rapidly to 100 percent clean,
renewable energy if we hope to avoid the most catastrophic effects of global
warming.
Specifically, the United States
must reduce its global warming emissions by at least 20 percent by 2020 and by
80 percent by 2050 and make energy efficiency improvements and the accelerated
development of renewable energy the centerpiece of our environmental and
economic development policies.
Recently, more than 150
members of Congress, including Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee and Al Green, endorsed
strong principles for action on energy and global warming.Environment Texas urged that those principles be the
blueprint for action for the next President and Congress.
“We commend Representatives Jackson Lee and Green for
their leadership on this critical issue.And we urge the rest of the Houston
delegation to join Rep. Jackson Lee in cosponsoring the Safe Climate Act (H.R.
1590), strong science-based legislation that would put the United States on track to solving
global warming,” concluded Metzger.