June was the Earth’s 13th consecutive month to break a global heat record.
It beat the record set last year for the hottest June on record, according to data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service of the European Union.
“We need to be preparing for more heat, more often.
That’s the reality.”More than half the U.S. population — almost 175 million people — faced extreme heat on July 4, and the impacts of this new normal continued to broil the country this week.
In the Western United States, a heat dome fed wildfires, and in Houston, the country’s fourth-largest city, excessive heat threatened lives.
Persons:
“, ”, Katherine Idziorek, —, Hurricane Beryl
Organizations:
European Union, University of North, Hurricane
Locations:
University of North Carolina, Charlotte, United States, Houston, Texas