OMNI CLIMATE MEMO MONDAYS, #185, JULY 1, 2024


Two orgs trying to engage with the public: YCC and ICN

UAF Arctic Research

Yale Climate Connection

“Dangerously high temperatures plague the southern U.S.”

This week, 52 million people in the southern U.S. are experiencing a heat wave made 400% more likely by climate change, according to Climate Central. And talking about it is an effective way to improve your friends and family members’ understanding of the connection between climate change and heat waves, new research from our colleagues at the Yale Program on Climate Communication suggests. Even just talking about heat — without saying the words “climate change” — can significantly change beliefs, the researchers found. 

· New study: Communicating the links between climate change and heat waves with the Climate Shift Index

These resources can help you plan how to protect yourself, your family, and your home during a heat wave. Forward them to people who live in the region that may be affected by this event.

· How to spot the symptoms of heat stroke and heat exhaustion

· How to stay cool in hot weather

· Common medications may increase the dangers of heat wave

What else you can do to help 
Climate change is making extreme weather more frequent and intense. One of the most important things you can do to help solve climate change is to talk about it in person and on social media. Talking about climate change during extreme weather events is particularly effective. The following post can help you feel like an expert when you talk to your friends and family. Save the graphic below to share tips via social media, text, or email.  Heat waves and climate change: Is there a connection?
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YCC seems locked into an ideology of individual adaptations.  As I watch the temp rise year after year and Republican gov inaction continues, I have decided to advocate not only for free educ. and health care for all but free swimming for all at the necessarily enlarged public pools.  Warming could be as large and destructive as WWII, requiring gov mobilization of similar scope, yes?   –D] 


 RESISTANCE: REVEALING THE TRUTH

“Most Americans had never heard of it.”   Inside Climate News <memberships@insideclimatenews.org> 
Dear reader,

More than 1 million gallons of oil spilled into the Kalamazoo River in July 2010, triggering the most expensive cleanup in U.S. history. The work dragged along for years.

Most Americans had never heard of it – until Inside Climate News released The Dilbit Disaster, offering an expansive look at the catastrophe and its aftermath. We won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in national reporting for the investigation.

This groundbreaking report is just one of many award-winning investigations from our team of journalists:

Exxon: The Road Not Taken – Our team revealed how Exxon worked at the forefront of climate misinformation, denying the science its own researchers had confirmed. Finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service

Harvesting Peril – We examined how the Farm Bureau’s climate agenda is failing its farmers. Winner of the 2019 Oakes Award for Distinguished Environmental Journalism

You can click here to read all of our investigations.

You deserve the truth about climate change, energy and the environment. At Inside Climate News, we’re finding it.

Sincerely,  The Inside Climate News team

Support our work

UAF, FULBRIGHT COLLEGE RESEARCH CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE ARCTIC June 27, 2024.  CONGRATULATIONS.
UAF’s Dr. Peter S. Ungar, recently awarded the Omni Center’s climate change fellowship, sent me an illustrated “comic” strip narrative of his and related research for K-12 kids.  Here is the link, you’ll enjoy it.  Among the hundred facts of the research I learned the word “ Fennoscandia” and gained a stronger identification with fellow herbivores–reindeer and lemmings!  Please view and share.

https://polarsteam.info/project/interactions-of-natural-and-social-systems-with-climate-change-globalization-and-infrastructure-development-in-the-arctic/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR239Whus9LXV9IKW93PL840cOYyZtcr7WF-8TwExBbXQWC0-riKfMhRdQA_aem_7bIDYmJQLqLUqfBqyqTMqw

Peter S. Ungar, PhD

Distinguished Professor of Anthropology 

Director of Environmental Dynamics 

University of Arkansas