America's cruel summer
Andrew Freedman,author of Axios Generate

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Record-setting heat and hazardous air have already consumed much of the U.S. this summer, and the worst may be yet to come.
The big picture: The effects of a warming climate are no longer happening in the background. They're actively dictating and shaping our lives.
Driving the news: Blistering heat waves have struck all over the country; another one is now ramping up in the Southwest.
- Tens of millions of people have been exposed to dangerously poor air quality due to smoke billowing from Canada's record-breaking wildfires.
- Those fires could worsen this month, and some could even last through the winter by becoming "zombie fires" in the Far North, burning in the soils of peatlands.
- This week featured the world's hottest days on record. Even hotter extremes lie ahead from the one-two punch of El Niño and climate change.
- The daily heat records set or tied this week have been astonishing, beating previous spikes that also occurred during 2016's El Niño conditions.
- The North Atlantic Ocean Basin's sea surface temperatures are at all-time record highs, leading some scientists to increase their forecasts for the number of hurricanes likely to form this season.
- Antarctic sea ice cover is at an all-time low.
- On Thursday, global average surface temperatures exceeded 63° Fahrenheit for the first time. Last month was the hottest June on record.
- This month will likely be the hottest July, and maybe the hottest month ever recorded, Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist with Berkeley Earth and at Stripe, tells Axios.
- The heat waves across the country this summer have been long-lasting and deadly, the result of stagnant weather patterns featuring brutal heat domes locked in place for weeks at a time.
- "Temperatures across the region may be some of the hottest we have ever seen," forecasters wrote in an online briefing Friday. They also stated it could break a record for the longest-lasting heat wave in the region's history.
- It is possible that Phoenix will tie or exceed its all-time temperature record of 122°F, which would be an acute public health risk.
- Extreme heat is the deadliest weather-related hazard in a typical year across the U.S.
- Some studies have found that certain heat waves would have been virtually impossible in the absence of human-caused global warming.
- According to Michael Wehner of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, climate change now makes typical heat waves about 5°F warmer than temperatures would have been in a preindustrial climate.
- The transition out of a cooling La Niña and into an El Niño, which tends to boost global average temperatures, has quickly manifested in record monthly temperatures, Hausfather told Axios in an email.
- That has now increased to "roughly 77%," he said.
- "We expect 2024 to be even warmer, as the majority of the El Niño's effects will be felt then."