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Climate

Wildfire Season Is Already Devastating North America
Climate

AM Briefing: North America Ablaze

On the Park Fire, coastal climate resilience, and flight delays

Climate

AM Briefing: EPA Union Endorses Harris

On an important endorsement, Ford’s earnings report, and tree bark

Yellow
Sparks

Why the Vineyard Wind Blade Broke

Plus answers to other pressing questions about the offshore wind project.

Green
Climate

AM Briefing: Hottest Day Ever – Again

On this week’s heat, nitrous oxide emissions, and Q2 earnings

Yellow
Manchin and Barrasso Just Released a Big Permitting Reform Bill

AM Briefing: A Big Day for Permitting Reform

On early reactions to the legislation, AI weather forecasts, and bull sharks

Yellow
Climate

Heat Records Don’t Stand a Chance

The week in heat, July 22-28.

Seattle.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

While the Northeast might start breathing more easily this week, the heat will intensify again in the West. Keep reading to discover what sweltering lies in store.

The Pacific Northwest takes its turn in the hot seat

The weekend brough intense heat to the Northwest, with many cities inching close to their all-time temperature records. While the potential for record-breaking heat is set to decrease throughout the week, temperatures in the region will remain above average, Bob Oravec, lead forecaster with the National Weather Service, told me. Cities like Spokane, Washington and Boise, Idaho will continue to see triple-digit temperatures until at least Wednesday. In fact, on Thursday, Boise might see its 10th day in a row above 100 degrees, breaking the city’s record.

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Politics

AM Briefing: Kamala’s Climate Record

On the 2024 presidential race, the EPA’s climate grants, and COP29

Examining Kamala Harris’ Climate Credentials
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Current conditions: England’s wet and cold summer has been linked to a concerning decline in insect populations • At least 11 people died in northern China after torrential rain caused a bridge to collapse • The West Coast’s record-breaking heat wave will last at least through Wednesday.

THE TOP FIVE

1. A quick look at Kamala Harris’ climate record

President Biden announced yesterday he will not run for re-election and endorsed his vice president, Kamala Harris, for the 2024 Democratic ticket. Tributes from his colleagues poured in quickly, with many hailing Biden’s decision as brave and patriotic, and others recounting his accomplishments during three-and-a-half years in office, including his climate record. “Biden will leave office with easily the strongest climate record of any president — and one of the stronger environmental records, generally, in decades,” wrote Heatmap’s Robinson Meyer. Biden signed the largest investment in clean energy and decarbonization in American history, oversaw a revitalization of American industrial strategy, passed the bipartisan infrastructure law and CHIPS and Science Act (both of which funded or expanded climate-friendly programs), and moved quickly to regulate greenhouse gas emissions using executive authority. “Democrats had tried and failed for 30 years to pass a climate law through the Senate,” Meyer said. “Biden succeeded.”

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