(Image source from: Star Tribune)
After a deadly California wildfire, now a massive new federal report issued on Friday warns that these types of extreme weather disasters are worsening in the United States.
The report issued by White House also oftentimes contradicts President Donald Trump.
The National Climate Assessment was written long before the deadly wildfires in California this month and before Hurricanes Michael and Florence raked the East Coast and Florida. It says warming-charged extremes "have already become more frequent, intense, widespread or of long duration."
The report notes that the last few years have smashed the U.S. records for damaging weather, costing approximately $400 billion since 2015.
The recent Northern California wildfires can be attributed to climate change, but there was less of a connection to those in Southern California, said co-author William Hohenstein of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
"A warm, dry climate has increased the areas burned over the last 20 years," he said at a press conference Friday.
The report is mandated by law every few years and is based on more than 1,000 previous research studies. It details how global warming from the burning of coal, oil, and gas is hurting each region of the United States and how it impacts different sectors of the economy, including energy and agriculture.
"Climate change is transforming where and how we live and presents growing challenges to human health and quality of life, the economy, and the natural systems that support us," the report says.
That includes deteriorating air pollution causing heart and lung troubles, more diseases from insects, the potential for an increase in deaths during heat waves, and nastier allergies.
"Annual losses in some economic sectors are projected to reach hundreds of billions of dollars by the end of the century more than the current gross domestic product (GDP) of many U.S. states," the report says. It will be especially costly for the nation's coasts because of rising seas and severe storm surges, which will lower property values. And in some areas, such as parts of Alaska and Louisiana, coastal flooding will likely force people to relocate.
"We are seeing the things we said would be happening, happen now in real life," said another co-author Katharine Hayhoe of Texas Tech University. "As a climate scientist, it is almost surreal." And Donald Wuebbles, a co-author from University of Illinois climate scientist, said, "We're going to continue to see severe weather events get stronger and more intense."
What makes the report differs from others is that it focuses on the United States, then goes more local and granular.
"All climate change is local," said Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Richard Alley, who wasn't part of the report but praised it.
While scientists talk of average global temperatures, people feel extremes more, he said.
"We live in our drought, our floods, and our heat waves. That means we have to focus on us," he said.
The Lower 48 states have warmed 1.8 degrees (1 degree Celsius) since 1900 with 1.2 degrees in the last few decades, according to the report. By the extremity of the century, the U.S. will be 3 to 12 degrees (1.6 to 6.6 degrees Celsius) hotter depending on how much greenhouse gases are released into the atmosphere, the report warns.
Outside officials and scientists from 13 federal agencies wrote the report, which was released on the afternoon following Thanksgiving. It was primitively scheduled for December.
The report often clashes with the president's past statements and tweets on the genuineness of climate change science, how much of it is caused by human race, how cyclical it is and what is causing increases in recent wildfires.
Trump tweeted this week about the cold weather hitting the East including: "Brutal and Extended Cold Blast could shatter ALL RECORDS - Whatever happened to Global Warming?"
Friday's report seemed to anticipate such comments, saying: "Over shorter timescales and smaller geographic regions, the influence of natural variability can be larger than the influence of human activity ... Over climate timescales of multiple decades, however, the global temperature continues to steadily increase."
Releasing the report on Black Friday "is a transparent attempt by the Trump Administration to bury this report and continue the campaign of not only denying but suppressing the best of climate science," said study co-author Andrew Light, an international policy expert at the World Resources Institute.
The timing of the release of the report and why it contradicts public statements from Trump were unanswered by officials, during a press conference on Friday. Report director David Reidmiller said questions about the timing were "relevant," but said what was in the report was more crucial.
Trump, elected Republicans, and administration officials often say they can't tell how much of climate change is caused by humans and how much is earthy.
The report, citing numerous studies, says that over 90 percent of the current warming is caused by humans. In the absence of greenhouse gases, natural forces such as changes in energy from the sun would be somewhat cooling Earth.
"There are no credible alternative human or natural explanations supported by the observational evidence," the report says.
-Sowmya Sangam