A Hot Summer?
July 2019 was the warmest month on Earth since such record-keeping began, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, but this may become only a cool memory.
Kent County currently experiences six days a year with a heat index above 100°F; Wicomico County experiences eight. By midcentury, however, it will be a different story, with 38 such days a year predicted for Kent County and 40 for Wicomico. By late in the century, Kent can expect that number to rise to 66 days a year, with Wicomico County up to 68. Very hot summers lie ahead!
Bold action can make a difference. The Union of Concerned Scientists estimates that the Eastern Shore of Maryland can reduce these predicted numbers by half. But, we’ll need to fight in order to experience only 27-31 days a year of extreme heat with health risks for sunstroke, heat cramps, and heat exhaustion.
To minimize the rise in heat, the UCS suggests that we call, email, or meet with our legislators and urge them to:
- Support global climate action, including U.S. participation in the Paris climate agreement
- Create extreme heat adaptation and emergency response plans
- Expend funding for programs that provide cooling assistance to low-and fixed-income households
- Direct the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to set heat-protective standards for workers
- Invest in heat-resilient infrastructure (e.g., train tracks that won’t buckle; road that won’t melt)
- Create and strengthen policies to reduce transportation emissions
- Invest in renewable energy, energy efficiency, and low-carbon energy technologies
- Put an economy-wide price on carbon emissions
Talk about this in your community meetings and town and city councils, and ask your state legislators what they are doing to mitigate the waves of heat to come! Let’s do this!
Source: Union of Concerned Scientists, http://www.ucsusa.org/killer-heat
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore





