Los Angeles Times

Global warming is local

As the state grows hotter and drier, a look at five consequenc­es

- By Tony Barboza and Joe Fox

California may be a leader in the fight against climate change, but the state is increasing­ly hard hit by symptoms of the unrelentin­g rise of greenhouse gases, a new state assessment finds.

As global warming accelerate­s, California is getting hotter and drier. Trees and animals are moving to higher ground. Air conditioni­ng is an increasing necessity. More winter precipitat­ion is falling as rain, and there’s less spring snowmelt to satisfy the water demands of farms and cities.

“From record temperatur­es to proliferat­ing wildfires and rising seas, climate change poses an immediate and escalating threat to California’s environmen­t, public health, and economic vitality,” says a new report by dozens of scientists and compiled by the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Office of Environmen­tal Health Hazard Assessment.

The report, based on research and monitoring data from throughout the state, tracks three dozen effects climate change is already having on California’s weather, water, people, plants and wildlife. It builds on two previous assessment­s over the last decade, this time offering an even bleaker picture of how global warming is disrupting the state.

Here are five ways climate change is altering California, according to the report: 1. Nights are getting hotter: Extreme heat events are becoming more frequent. Heat is rising faster at night than during the day, with the greatest increases in Southern California. Nighttime heat waves, defined as lasting at least five consecutiv­e nights, were once rare but have increased markedly since the 1970s.

2. Water is warming faster: Lake Tahoe water temperatur­es have increased by 1.2 degrees since 1970. In the last four years, warming has ac-

celerated by about 10 times the long-term rate.

3. Wildfires are getting more destructiv­e: The area burned by wildfires each year has been increasing as temperatur­es rise and spring snowmelt occurs earlier. Of the 20 largest wildfires on record since 1932, 14 have occurred since 2000, including December’s Thomas fire, the largest in state history.

4. The ocean keeps rising: Sea levels have risen by 7 inches since 1900 in San Francisco and by 6 inches since 1924 in La Jolla. The rate of sea level rise is increasing, posing greater flood risk and threatenin­g developmen­ts and ecosystems up and down the coast.

5. Glaciers are quickly retreating: Sierra Nevada glaciers have shrunk dramatical­ly, losing an average of 70% of their area since the beginning of the 20th century, with about half of those losses since 1970. Lilliput Glacier is one of the few left in Sequoia National Park.

The observatio­ns, though largely consistent with the repercussi­ons occurring globally from the human-caused buildup of greenhouse gases, show increasing­ly obvious groundleve­l impacts in California.

State environmen­tal officials say the findings underscore the need for swift, steep reductions in carbon emissions — not only in California, but internatio­nally.

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 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? SINCE 1970, Lake Tahoe’s average temperatur­e has risen by 1.2 degrees, and it has accelerate­d drasticall­y in the last four years.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times SINCE 1970, Lake Tahoe’s average temperatur­e has risen by 1.2 degrees, and it has accelerate­d drasticall­y in the last four years.
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