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Solar Power’s China Problem
  + stars: | 2023-08-01 | by ( David Gelles | More About David Gelles | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Economies of scale and government subsidies, especially in China, have helped to drive down solar energy prices by 85 percent since 2010, supercharging a global boom in new hookups. This year, for the first time, investors are expected to put more money into solar than oil. But the solar energy supply chain is still dominated by China, an authoritarian regime engaged in a trade war with the U.S. And many of the industry’s key materials and components are made with forced labor from the Xinjiang region in western China. In recent years, other countries, led by the U.S., have finally gotten serious about trying to challenge China’s dominance. The report, produced by human rights and solar industry experts, found that the vast majority of solar panels still have significant exposure to the Xinjiang region, where the U.S. and the U.N. say the Chinese government is committing numerous human rights violations.
Persons: It’s, Ana Swanson, Ivan Penn Organizations: U.S Locations: China, Xinjiang, U.S
“Good afternoon parents,” began the message from Camp Combe in Putnam Valley, New York. “It is with a heavy heart that we have made the difficult decision to cancel the 2023 camp season. Due to the recent severe storms, the camp has sustained extensive damage.”Nine days earlier, a slow moving weather system dumped torrential amounts on the East coast, causing extensive flooding from Philadelphia to Vermont. Now the day camp that my two children had attended for the past four years — leaving them reliably exhausted and happy — was done for the year. Cynthia Delfino, the chief executive of the YMCA of Central North Westchester, said that what remains of Camp Combe is now an odorous, mucky mess.
Persons: , , Camp, Cynthia Delfino, “ We’ve Organizations: YMCA, Central North Locations: Camp Combe, Putnam Valley , New York, East, Philadelphia, Vermont, Central North Westchester
We Know What’s Causing This Heat
  + stars: | 2023-07-25 | by ( David Gelles | More About David Gelles | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Some of the searing temperatures that scorched the United States, Mexico, Europe and China this month would not have happened without human-caused climate change, my colleague Delger Erdenesanaa reports. Before humans began burning fossil fuels in enormous quantities, this month’s North American and European heat waves would have been “virtually impossible,” according to a newly released statistical analysis. China’s heat wave would have happened only about once every 250 years. “Without climate change, we wouldn’t see this at all,” said Friederike Otto, a senior lecturer in climate science at Imperial College London and co-founder of World Weather Attribution, the group that produced a study released today, at a press briefing. “Or it would be so rare that it basically would not be happening.”
Persons: Delger Erdenesanaa, , Friederike Otto Organizations: Imperial College London Locations: United States, Mexico, Europe, China
Linda Ressler is an airplane cabin cleaner at the airport in Phoenix, where the temperature has reached or surpassed 110 degrees Fahrenheit for 20 days in a row and counting. Ressler, 57, works the overnight shift inside planes where the air conditioning is off and nighttime temperatures regularly approach 100 degrees. This week, as she was wiping down a tray table, she briefly lost consciousness from the heat. You’re overwhelmed by the heat.”Ressler is just one of millions of workers around the world struggling under extreme temperatures. Heat waves are gripping three continents right now, just after Earth recorded what scientists said were likely its hottest days in modern history.
Persons: Linda Ressler, , Ressler Locations: Phoenix
Ms. Sims, 54, may be the most surprising legal figure to emerge as the world grapples with the devastating impacts of a warming planet. And she is now the singular force behind a creative legal gambit to make oil and gas companies pay for the devastation being wrought by climate change in Puerto Rico. Her strategy is being carefully watched by the fossil fuel industry and environmental groups as well as other lawyers and municipalities. The lawsuit she filed in November goes after a who’s who of the fossil fuel industry — Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell, BP and others. The case is part of a new wave of litigation targeting oil, gas and coal companies over climate change, which is driven by the burning of their products.
Persons: Sims Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Royal, Shell Locations: Puerto Rico
Surviving Extreme Heat
  + stars: | 2023-07-13 | by ( David Gelles | More About David Gelles | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Jack moved to Phoenix in 2021, chasing stories about the fast-growing American West. And this week, he filed a remarkable article about the withering heat wave currently scorching the Southwest. As the climate warms, forecasters say that dangerous levels of heat crank up earlier in the year, last longer — often well past Halloween — and lock America’s hottest big city in a sweltering straitjacket. “In triple-digit heat, monkey bars singe children’s hands, water bottles warp and seatbelts feel like hot irons. Neighborhoods feel like ghost towns at midday, with rumbling rooftop air-conditioners offering the only sign of life.”
Persons: Jack Healy, Jack, “ Summers, Locations: Phoenix
When Climate Change Hits Home
  + stars: | 2023-07-11 | by ( David Gelles | More About David Gelles | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Even if you’ve been paying attention to climate change, it can sometimes feel very far away, distant in both space and time. But on Sunday night, as I was writing my first edition of this newsletter, it came roaring into my kitchen. I was with my family at our 100-year-old cabin in the Hudson Valley, north of New York City. One woman died and dozens had to be rescued as a slow-moving storm system produced widespread flooding in New York State and New England. We know that man-made climate change is making extreme weather like this more severe.
Persons: you’ve Locations: Hudson, New York City, New York State, New England
An unrelenting heat dome over Phoenix. A decade ago, any one of these events would have been seen as an aberration. This week, they are happening simultaneously as climate change fuels extreme weather, prompting New York Gov. “It’s not just a figment of your imagination, and it’s not because everybody now has a smartphone,” said Jeff Berardelli, the chief meteorologist and climate specialist for WFLA News in Tampa. “We’ve seen an increase in extreme weather.
Persons: Kathy Hochul, “ It’s, , Jeff Berardelli, “ We’ve Organizations: New York Gov, Democrat, WFLA News Locations: Hudson, Phoenix, Miami, Vermont, Delaware, Texas, Oklahoma, Chicago, Tampa
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