Study: Nevada Has Big Temperature Gains
RENO, Nev. (AP) - Nevada is among the states with the most
dramatic increase in average temperatures the last 30 years,
according to a new study that examines the impact of global warming
across the country.
The average temperature in Reno from June through August last
year was 75.6 degrees, almost 7 degrees above the 30-year average,
the U.S. Public Interest Research Group reported. The gap was the
biggest measured nationally.
Las Vegas' average temperature last summer was 3.6 degrees above
the 30-year average from 1971-2000, while Elko's was 4 degrees
above normal and Ely's was 2.1 degrees hotter, the report said.
``The scientific evidence of global warming is incontrovertible,
and Nevada is feeling the heat more intensely than most of the rest
of the U.S,'' said Stephen M. Rowland, Professor of Geology at
University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
``Only a tiny bit of this increase in temperature can be
attributed to increased urbanization the so-called urban
heat-island effect,'' Rowland continued. ``Global warming is here,
and we better get serious about confronting it.''
According to the National Climatic Data Center, the 2006 summer
and 2006 overall were the second warmest on record for the lower 48
states. And 2007 is on track to be the second warmest year on
record globally.
``Global warming is rewriting the record books in Nevada and
across the country,'' said Jill Bunting, a spokesperson for U.S.
PIRG.
``Unless our elected officials act now to curb global warming
pollution, Nevada will see more severe heat waves that increase the
risk for wildfires, drought, and heat-related illnesses,'' she
said.
The new report found Reno's average temperature from 2000 to
2006 was 3.4 degrees above the 30-year average, the second-highest
reading in the nation for the period.
The environmental advocacy group analyzed temperature data
collected from 255 weather stations across the country to examine
warming temperatures during recent years compared with historical
trends.
Nationally, the average temperature during the summer of 2006
was at least half a degree above the 30-year average at 82 percent
of locations studied.
Reno experienced 74 days the temperature hit at least 90 degrees
in 2006 - 21 more days than the historical average. The average
temperature for all of 2006 was 3.3 degrees above normal in Reno,
the report said.
The average minimum temperature in Reno last summer - the lowest
temperatures recorded on a given day, usually at night - was 59
degrees. That was almost 10 degrees above the normal minimum
temperature recorded from 1971 to 2000, again the biggest
difference noted nationally.
Warmer nighttime temperatures exacerbate the public health
effects of heat waves, since people need cooler nighttime
temperatures to recover from excessive heat exposure during the
day, the study said.
Las Vegas was second on that list nationally, recording an
average minimum temperature of 80.5 degrees last summer - 4.8
degrees above normal. It's average for all of 2006 was 2.8 degrees
above normal.
Las Vegas' above-average temperatures in 2006 are part of a
broader warming trend since 2000. Between 2000 and 2006, the
average temperature was 1.7 degrees above the 30-year average in
Las Vegas.
``Nevadans are starting to understand that global warming is
affecting us right now, and that our elected officials need to
start making some tough choices to protect our quality of life,''
said Kyle Davis, the Policy Director for the Nevada Conservation
League and a member of the Governor's Climate Change Task Force.
On the Net:
U.S. Public Interest Research Group: www.uspirg.org/
07/26/07 01:08
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