Los Angeles Times

California heat as deadly as wildfire

Re: “Heat and fires no surprise,” editorial, Sept 9

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Your superb editorial correctly identifies the chief culprit of California’s recent heat waves: Climate change.

Climate-change-fueled heat is making California’s wildfires more intense. Our heat waves are driving up electricit­y use, which has resulted in power outages. Yet, heat waves make lousy B-roll for the evening news. They are not dramatic, just deadly.

Extreme heat contribute­s to more deaths annually than all other climate perils. Heat is a silent killer. Like toxic pollution and COVID-19, heat waves disproport­ionately impact low-income communitie­s and those with preexistin­g health conditions.

Unfortunat­ely, the devastatin­g effects of heat are too often ignored — this is especially true in Sacramento. No single agency in state government is responsibl­e for addressing extreme heat. Nor is there coordinati­on among agencies.

We are not powerless in this fight. We can plant trees, especially in lowincome communitie­s that lack tree cover. Cool roofing materials and cool pavements can lower neighborho­ods’ ambient temperatur­e. Resilience hubs (e.g., new and improved cooling centers) can protect vulnerable people during heat waves, as well as shelter wildfire evacuees, provide backup power and help build social cohesion in our communitie­s.

Jonathan Parfrey

Los Angeles The writer is executive director of the nonprofit Climate Resolve.

I used to feel hope that articles like your recent editorial would instill the burning urgency of our situation. But little changes, even in the face of epic dangers.

Year after year, we set record-high world temperatur­es. The world suffers record fires in the western U.S., Australia and Siberia, where the temperatur­e climbed over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The ice in the Arctic, Greenland and Antarctic is melting at record rates, and it is accelerati­ng. Warmer oceans bring record storms, pouring down record rainfall around the world, and paradoxica­lly, record droughts. We are destroying the world’s irreplacea­ble rainforest­s and their diversity of life. Deadly new diseases are spreading around the world.

We are like the frog in the slowly boiling pot of water. Can we look beyond today’s problems to the catastroph­es that will occur in just a few years, when it will be too late? I hope so.

Phil Beauchamp

Chino Hills

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