New Draft Report: Global Warming Affecting Minnesota in Big Ways

Media Contacts
Michelle Hesterberg

Environment Minnesota

For Immediate Release: January 14, 2013
Contact: Michelle Hesterberg (612-331-3315, [email protected])
 
New Draft Report: Global Warming Affecting Minnesota in Big Ways
 
Minneapolis, Minnesota — Minnesota and surrounding states are experiencing more severe heat waves, threats to the agricultural sector and more extreme rainfall events and flooding due in part to global warming, according to the new draft National Climate Assessment report released on Friday, January 11. The draft report incorporates input from more than 240 experts from around the country, and from federal agencies including the Department of Energy and NASA.
 
“This draft report confirms in exhaustive detail what many Minnesotans already know: global warming is very real, it is changing our environment in major ways, and it poses serious threats to our safety, our health and our well-being,” said Michelle Hesterberg, with Environment Minnesota. “Thankfully, we have the clean energy solutions at our fingertips to tackle this problem, but we need our elected officials to do more to put these solutions to work.”  
 
From major flooding in Duluth this summer and across the state in recent years to extreme droughts throughout the Midwest, Minnesota is experiencing many of the dangerous changes in our own weather and climate that are described in the new draft report.
 
Findings of the draft National Climate Assessment (NCA) report related to nationwide trends include:

  • “The climate change of the past 50 years is due primarily to human activities, predominantly the burning of fossil fuels,” and there is “new and stronger evidence” that many of the recent increases in extreme weather are “related to human activities”
  • “Climate change threatens human health and well-being in many ways, including impacts from increased extreme weather events, wildfire, decreased air quality, diseases transmitted by insects, food, and water, and threats to mental health.”

While the draft NCA report does not include policy recommendations, other reports have been clear about the need to combat global warming by cleaning up the largest sources of the carbon pollution that is fueling the problem. The Obama administration is currently working to do just that by developing carbon pollution limits for power plants.
 
“By setting the first-ever federal limits on carbon pollution from power plants, President Obama can take a historic step toward tackling global warming and addressing the dangerous threats outlined in this draft report,” said Michelle Hesterberg. “We urge the Obama administration to finalize its proposed carbon pollution limits for new power plants, and move forward quickly to set limits on carbon pollution from existing power plants as well.”  
 
The draft NCA report, which is available at http://ncadac.globalchange.gov/, was written by the National Climate Assessment Development Committee, a 60-member federal advisory committee made up of scientists and other experts. The NCA is produced every four years as mandated by a bill passed by Congress in 1990, and is now open to public comment before being finalized and given to Congress and President Obama.