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For Immediate Release:
2008-10-22
For More Information:
Contact Erika Staaf
(603) 229-3222

New Report: Temperatures Up in New Hampshire

Concord, NH - Environment New Hampshire released a new report documenting that the average temperature in Concord in 2007 was 0.6°F above the historical average.  The year 2007 tied for the second warmest year on record globally and was the 10th warmest year on record in the United States.  These record temperatures are part of a trend toward rising temperatures resulting from global warming.

“Throw out the record books because global warming is raising temperatures in New Hampshire and across the country,” said Kathryn Fox of Environment New Hampshire.  “While one or two degrees may not seem like much, just as any parent with a sick child knows, even a small rise in temperature can have a big effect,” she continued.

According to NASA, seven of the eight warmest years on record globally have occurred since 2001.  These above-average temperatures led Environment New Hampshire to more closely examine recent temperature trends at the local level. 

“Feeling the Heat: Global Warming and Rising Temperatures in the United States” compares government temperature data for the years 2000-2007 with the historical average, or “normal,” temperature for the preceding 30 years, 1971-2000.  The data was collected at 255 weather stations – those with the highest quality data – in all 50 states and Washington, DC.

Key findings for New Hampshire include:

• In 2007, the average temperature was 0.6°F above normal in Concord.

• Concord’s above-average temperatures in 2007 are part of a warming trend.  Between 2000 and 2007, the average temperature was 0.9°F above the historical average in Concord.  Nationally, the average temperature during this eight-year period was at least 0.5°F above normal at nearly 90 percent of the weather stations.

• Over the course of 2007, Concord experienced 13 days where the temperature hit at least 90°F, which is 2 days more than the historical average.  Extreme heat can have serious implications for human health, causing heat stroke, heat exhaustion, and even death. 

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – the prestigious United Nations body that won a Nobel Prize last year for its work – has concluded the evidence of global warming is “unequivocal” and that human activities are responsible for most of the increase in global average temperatures.  Burning fossil fuels to power cars, homes, and industry produces most U.S. global warming emissions.

A recent Bush administration report said “it is very likely” that more people will die in the United States during extremely hot periods in the future.  In addition, the report identified particular risks for the New England region, including water shortages from early snowmelt, degraded air quality, heat waves, drought, extreme rainfall with flooding, and sea level rise.

Energy issues have featured prominently in both presidential and vice-presidential debates this election season. 

“We’re at a crossroads on energy, and it’s up to the next President to choose a new path that curbs global warming and helps recharge our struggling economy,” said Fox. “It’s clear that our energy crisis isn’t just hurting us at the pump, but it’s also causing Granite Staters to feel the heat.  The good news is that repowering America with wind and solar power will curb global warming at a time when clean, renewable energy is one of the few bright spots in our troubled economy.”

According to the latest climate science, the United States and the world must break its dependence on fossil fuels and transition rapidly to 100 percent clean, renewable energy if we hope to avoid the most catastrophic effects of global warming.

Specifically, the United States must reduce its global warming emissions by at least 20 percent by 2020 and by 80 percent by 2050 and make energy efficiency improvements and the accelerated development of renewable energy the centerpiece of our environmental and economic development policies.

Recently, more than 150 members of Congress, including Representatives Paul Hodes and Carol Shea-Porter, endorsed strong principles for action on energy and global warming.  Environment America urged that those principles be the blueprint for action for the next President and Congress. 

“We commend Representatives Hodes and Shea-Porter for their leadership on this critical issue,” Fox concluded.