Overnight Energy & Environment

Overnight Energy: US communities say dire predictions in UN climate report already unfolding

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Today we’re looking at some communities saying they’re already facing climate change impacts, the Energy Department’s projection for solar and a reinstated mask mandate for some spaces within national parks.

APOCALYPSE NOW? US communities say dire predictions in UN climate report already unfolding

For many U.S. communities, the bleak predictions laid out in a new United Nations climate change report are more a reflection of the present and not just what’s to come.

Residents in places like Miami and Alaska say they are already seeing the consequences of warming temperatures and rising sea levels, while the West deals with wildfires and last week’s alarming projections from a U.N. panel have those same residents bracing for more challenges.

The “report makes it glaringly clear that we really don’t have any time to waste when it comes to climate solutions,” said Carly Ferro, director of the Sierra Club’s Utah chapter, where residents have sustained wildfires and drought in recent years.

What’s going to happen overall: The U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned of significant global impacts, including heat waves, more frequent and intense precipitation and droughts, as climate change persists.

But what’s going to happen to the U.S. (and other nearby places)? The report predicted temperature changes across North and Central America that are larger than the global average and increases in extreme high temperatures, increases in relative sea level rise along most coasts and more extreme storms.

In the central and western U.S., increased drought and fire conditions are likely, while the northern part of the continent, including Alaska, is expected to see “very large” temperature increases.

But residents, government officials and environmental advocates in various locations across the U.S. say they’ve already started to see the impacts predicted in the U.N. report.

Read more about the climate impacts communities are already experiencing here.

 

HERE COMES THE SUN: Solar could provide 40 percent of US power generation by 2035, Biden administration says

The Department of Energy is projecting that solar power could comprise up to 40 percent of U.S. power generation nationwide by 2035, an increase of more than tenfold from today, with better incentives for renewable energy.

In a memo released Tuesday, department officials cite a pre-publication study from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory indicating that solar energy would need to grow at 3 to 4 times its current rate to reach this point.

With this level of acceleration, the memo states, solar generation could increase from 3 percent now to more than 40 percent over the next 14 years.

The memo identifies a number of strategies officials say could advance this goal, including clean energy tax credits, investment in the grid and transmission lines and increased deployment to low-income communities.

“Meeting these goals will require billions in investment and market opportunities through 2050 across clean energy generation, energy storage, electricity delivery, and operations and maintenance — including in low-income and community solar,” the memo states. “Investments that lower both the hardware and soft administrative costs of solar will save consumers thousands of dollars on their residential systems and help lower their utility bills.”

Read more about the memo here.

 

MASK UP! Park Service mandates masks in buildings, crowded public spaces

The National Park Service on Monday reinstated mask requirements, ordering visitors at national parks around the country to don face coverings when they are inside buildings or in crowded outdoor spaces.

According to the National Park Service, the requirement will apply to all park-goers, regardless of their vaccination status.

“Visitors to national parks are coming from locations across the country, if not across the world,” National Park Service Deputy Director Shawn Benge said in a press release.  

“Because of this, and recognizing that the majority of the United States is currently in substantial or high transmission categories, we are implementing a service-wide mask requirement to ensure our staff and visitors’ safety,” Benge added.

In May, the administration lifted for vaccinated people a mask mandate in national parks. 

Read more about the new mandate here.

 

WHAT WE’RE READING:

Postcard From Thermal: Surviving the Climate Gap in Eastern Coachella Valley, ProPublica reports

UK government sets out strategy for a hydrogen economy, Reuters reports

‘It’s just wrong’: Internal fight over Sierra Club founder’s racial legacy roils organization, Politico reports

Pesticides can amplify each other. Bees have become the victims., Vox reports

Ohio efficiency incentives could return under state bill, The Sentinel-Tribune reports

 

ICYMI: Stories from Tuesday…

Solar could provide 40 percent of US power generation by 2035, Biden administration says

National Park Service mandates masks in buildings, crowded public spaces

US communities say dire predictions in UN climate report already unfolding

 

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