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Global heating: Study shows impact of 'climate racism' in US


BBC News
By Matt McGrath
image captionA man carrying an air conditioner during a hot spell in New York
A new study says that black people living in most US cities are subject to double the level of heat stress as their white counterparts.
The researchers say the differences were not explained by poverty but by historic racism and segregation.
As a result, people of colour more generally, live in areas with fewer green spaces and more buildings and roads.
These exacerbate the impacts of rising temperatures and a changing climate.
Cities are well known magnifiers of a warmer climate. ....

United States , Jeremy Hoffman , Matt Mcgrath , Angel Hsu , Nature Communications , University Of North Carolina , Science Museum Of Virginia , North Carolina Chapel Hill , Science Museum , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஜெர்மி ஹாஃப்மேன் , மேட் மக்ர்யாத் , தேவதை ஶூ , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வடக்கு கரோலினா , அறிவியல் அருங்காட்சியகம் ஆஃப் வர்ஜீனியா , வடக்கு கரோலினா தேவாலயம் மலை , அறிவியல் அருங்காட்சியகம் ,

Hot summer days are even hotter for many Americans of color


Hot summer days are even hotter for many Americans of color
New research shows just how much hotter
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Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images
In cities across the US, people of color are enduring hotter summer temperatures than their white counterparts, new research shows. It’s another sign that the consequences of rising temperatures will hit vulnerable communities harder than others.
Rising temperatures will hit vulnerable communities harder
A person of color, on average, lives in a census tract that’s more than a full degree Celsius (nearly 2 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter in the summer than their non-Hispanic white counterparts, according to a study published today in the journal ....

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The Race to Zero strengthens and clarifies campaign criteria


The Race to Zero strengthens and clarifies campaign criteria
As net zero commitments proliferate, the refined criteria outline the minimum standard for initiatives of businesses, investors, cities, regions and universities for robust and credible net zero commitments.
By Climate Champions | April 29, 2021
The UN-supported Race to Zero campaign – the largest alliance of non-state actors committing to achieving net zero emissions before 2050 – has published its first annual review of its criteria, including refined criteria and an interpretation guide
As net zero commitments proliferate, the refined criteria outline the minimum standard for initiatives of businesses, investors, cities, regions and universities for robust and credible net zero commitments ....

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