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Climate Fix: 2023 Is Setting Global Heat Records. 2024 May Be Worse.

KQED's Forum

KQED

News, Politics, News Commentary

4.2726 Ratings

🗓️ 31 July 2023

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The month of July is on track to be the hottest month on record for planet Earth. Three continents are blistering under heat domes. In parts of California, temperatures have gone well above 110 degrees Fahrenheit. Los Angeles Times reporter Hayley Smith experienced this firsthand during a reporting trip to Death Valley, where in one day she experienced 128 degrees — which only cooled to 116 degrees at night. California Governor Newsom set up efforts to educate the public about heat events; President Biden announced plans to help communities adapt. But will this be enough? As part of our “Climate Fix” series with the KQED Science team, we’ll talk about how our future is heating up and what can be done to cool our planet. Guests: Danielle Venton, science reporter, KQED News Jeff Goodell, author, "The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on A Scorched Planet," "Big Coal," and "The Water Will Come;" Guggenheim Fellow; regular commentator on energy and climate issues, CNN, MSNBC, and other outlets Hayley Smith, reporter focusing on extreme weather, Los Angeles Times Karen A. McKinnon, assistant professor, UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, Department of Statistics - McKinnon studies large-scale climate variability and change, with a particular focus on connections to high-impact weather events. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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From KQED.

0:33.6

... From KQED

0:40.3

From KQED in San Francisco, I'm Alexis Madrigal.

0:49.3

July has been hot across the northern hemisphere, like extremely absurdly hot. Some climate scientists

0:57.0

told the AP that, quote, this month's heat is likely the hottest Earth has been in about

1:03.4

120,000 years. 120,000 years. And we're likely headed for the hottest year on record.

1:13.3

Can we definitively attribute this multi-continent event to climate change, or is it just

1:18.3

a freak weather thing?

1:19.9

We'll talk with reporters and scientists who've been covering the extreme heat.

1:23.2

It's our latest installment of Climate Fix, our collaboration with our science team.

1:27.1

It's all coming up next right after this news.

...

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