Over Labor Day weekend we may hear major climate change news from Hangzhou, China. That’s where the G20 leaders will be meeting to work their way through a number of major issues. Negotiators for the United States and China have been trying to agree on terms for ratification of the Paris climate accord so that they can announce it in Hangzhou or in the days leading up to the summit.
Abandoning Home of 400 Years Because of Climate Change
The Bering Sea continues to swallow the Alaskan Native village Shishmaref, and on August 16 residents voted to leave their 400-year-old home. The village has been losing up to 10 feet of shoreline a year, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Auburn University. Since 1969, 200 feet of shoreline has been eaten away, a state-funded study concluded.
Think This Summer Is Bad? It's Only Going to Get Worse
If you’re in Philadelphia, Washington, or any of the other places where the mercury is soaring, stop complaining. On July 22, the temperature hit 129 degrees in Basra, Iraq. Stepping outside is like “walking into a fire,” said Zainab Guman, a university student in Basra told The Washington Post’s Hugh Naylor. “It’s like everything on your body — your skin, your eyes, your nose — starts to burn,” she said.
Are Your Beach Trips Numbered?
As beach season winds down, anyone who enjoys beaches should be concerned about their future. One of New England’s most famous beaches, Herring Cove on Cape Cod, is being consumed by rising sea levels, presumably due to climate change. “We’re retreating,” Cape Cod National Seashore Superintendent George E. Price, Jr., told the New York Times’ Jess Bidgood.