Friday, April 6, 2012

Global warming turns up the heat - bcrnews.com

CHICAGO/MANLIUS â€" A Bureau County farmer joined Sen. Dick Durbin Wednesday morning for the release of a new report on the impact of weather disasters on Illinois residents.

Keith Bolin of Manlius and Durbin were on hand for the release of a new Environment Illinois report, “In the Path of the Storm: Global Warming, Extreme Weather, and the Impacts of Weather-Related Disasters in the United States.” The report examines county-level weather-related disaster declaration data from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for 2006 through 2011 to determine how many Illinoisans live in counties hit by recent weather disasters. Environment Illinois is a statewide environmental advocacy group.

The report found 97 percent of Illinoisans live in counties affected by federally declared weather-related disasters since 2006. The report highlighted two weather-related disasters that took place in Illinois last year: The spring flooding of the Mississippi River which killed seven people and caused up to $9 billion in damages; and the Groundhog Day blizzard, which killed 36 people in the Midwest and inflicted $1.8 billion in damages.

“Millions of Illinoisans have lived through extreme weather causing extremely big problems for Illinois’s economy and our public safety,” said Max Muller, Environment Illinois’s program director. “Given that global warming will likely fuel even more extreme weather, we need to cut dangerous carbon pollution now.”

“We ought to face the reality of greenhouse gas emissions and create energy and environmental policies to reduce their destructive impact,” Durbin said. “We need to invest in renewable energy and pollution controls to help slow the effects of climate change and protect our public health. It is critical that we leave our children and grandchildren with a sustainable planet and a promising, bright future.”

The county-level data can be viewed through an interactive map available on Environment Illinois’s website at http://environmentillinois.org/. The map shows numerous disasters in the country’s midsection, including Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, and significant impact in the northeast.

In Illinois, Bureau County has had two weather-related disasters since 2006, the severe storms on Oct. 3, 2008, and the blizzard on March 17, 2011.

Nationally, federally declared weather-related disasters have affected counties housing 242 million people since 2006, or nearly four out of five Americans. The number of disasters inflicting more than $1 billion in damage set an all-time record last year, with total damages from those disasters costing at least $55 billion.

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