Home Much hotter summers, loss of forests expected as Virginia climate heats up
News

Much hotter summers, loss of forests expected as Virginia climate heats up

AFP

earth-new“It’s not just ‘global warming’ now,” says author Stephen Nash, “but ‘Arlington Warming’ or ‘Richmond Warming.’ Regional modeling allows climatologists to project just how hot we can expect typical summers to be in the Fairfax, Norfolk, Danville or the Roanoke area.”

Wide ranging climate change impacts throughout Virginia are detailed in a new book, Virginia Climate Fever, by journalist Stephen Nash. Those impacts range from sea level rise, to acidification of the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic, to summers with far more sweltering 90+ days than Virginians now experience.

See the projections at VIRGINIACLIMATEFEVER.COM

As average global temperature rises — and depending on how the world responds to the threat of climate change — Virginians could experience a climate closer to Alabama or Mississippi. As a result, scientists have projected that Virginia’s forested lands may be lost to drought, fire, or insect pests in a “big die-off,” to be replaced by the shrubs and grasslands of a savanna. Diseases more typical of the tropics including dengue fever and chikungunya are more likely to pose public health risks, according to infectious disease experts.

The book lays out climate projections for Virginia by Texas Tech University Professor Katharine Hayhoe, an atmospheric scientist. For the first time, the data allows Virginians to consider projected temperature increases where they live as the global average temperature rises.

If greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in the global atmosphere at current rates, Fairfax County could see nearly double the number of 90+ degree days in a typical summer over the next few decades, and more as the heat continues to build. In Richmond, sticky summer days of 90+ could increase from from 36 days to 60, well before mid-century. Even Highland County, known for its pleasantly cool summers, could see 90-degree days quadruple, with more on the way as global warming increases.

“Steve Nash’s book allows Virginians to glimpse a future they can still shape,” said Michael Mann, a former University of Virginia climate scientist who is now a professor of Meteorology at Penn State University. “If we don’t like that future, we can take actions now to reduce carbon pollution — actions like the U.S. EPA’s Clean Power Plan to reduce carbon pollution from fossil fuel power plants,” Mann said.

Support AFP




AFP

AFP

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

vdot road construction
Local

VDOT: Updated road work scheduled for the week of July 6-10

Donald Trump FIFA Peace Prize
Etc.

Trump called FIFA president to get reversal on suspension: The bloom is off the USMNT rose

We’ve now officially entered the U.S. is cheating! phase of the 2026 World Cup, with word that Donald Trump personally appealed to FIFA President Gianni Infantino to lobby for a reversal of the one-game suspension for USMNT star Folarin Balogun.

charlottesville map
Local

Charlottesville: Updates for road work ongoing the week of July 6-10

The Charlottesville Department of Utilities is kicking off Phase I of the West Main Street Utilities Replacement Project on Monday, July 6.

fair carnival flag ferris wheel fireworks circus tent election
U.S. & World

Alon Ben-Meir: America at 250 faces a reckoning, and a call to conscience

staunton
Local

Staunton: John Glover retires as city building official after 31 years with local government

radio
Local

Last Week in Rob Schilling: The point has been made, so, time to move on

Folarin Balogun
Etc.

World Cup: USMNT gets leading goal scorer back in shock FIFA move