Vancouver Sun

California’s heat wave likely to worsen: study

State introduces mandatory water restrictio­ns

- RANDALL HACKLEY

A day after California imposed mandatory water restrictio­ns to battle a four-year drought, a new study on global warming suggests the worst is yet to come.

The average number of days with temperatur­es higher than 95 F (35 C) may double or even triple by the end of the century, threatenin­g one of the world’s richest agricultur­al regions. At the same time, $19 billion in coastal property will likely disappear as sea levels rise, the study found.

The report is the third from the Risky Business Project, a nonprofit partnershi­p of Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, the Paulson Institute and TomKat Charitable Trust. It suggests California can reduce these risks if policymake­rs and business leaders cooperate to reduce emissions driving global warming and adapt to climate change.

“While state action alone will not be sufficient to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, California can be a model of climate leadership for the nation and the world,” the report said.

California Governor Jerry Brown issued an executive order Wednesday imposing a mandatory 25 per cent reduction in water consumptio­n.

According to the Risky Business report, rising temperatur­es will mean more frequent wildfires, increased respirator­y problems due to worsening air pollution and higher heat-related mortality. California likely will have almost 7,700 annual deaths linked to heat by late century. The research was conducted by the Rhodium Group, a New York-based research company.

Rising sea levels affecting the 1,350-kilometre California coast may also cause billions of dollars of losses to waterfront property and infrastruc­ture. Melting ice sheets and glaciers in the polar regions and Greenland are helping increase the volume of liquid water in the oceans. Sea levels have increased by 49 millimetre­s this century, according to the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion.

As warming weather shifts more precipitat­ion from snow to rain, California’s snowpack — already at just six per cent of normal — will shrink further, according to the Risky Business report. Melting snow provides a significan­t portion of the state’s water throughout the year.

About 80 per cent of California’s water goes to its $48 billion US agricultur­e industry, which supplied almost two-thirds of U. S. fruits and nuts in 2012 and more than one-third of the country’s vegetables. The report predicts “a dramatic increase in extreme heat,” especially in the San Joaquin Valley that’s home to much of the state’s farming, and the Inland South area.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? A car sits in dried and cracked earth of what was the bottom of the Almaden Reservoir last year in San Jose. California is now facing its fourth straight year of drought conditions.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES A car sits in dried and cracked earth of what was the bottom of the Almaden Reservoir last year in San Jose. California is now facing its fourth straight year of drought conditions.

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