Minnesota Public Radio News Chief Meteorologist Paul Huttner discusses the latest research on our changing climate.
Grants help Minnesota farmers deal with extreme weather
Minnesota is experiencing its fourth straight year of flash drought — and farmers are feeling the effects in their fields.“Farmers and ranchers face unique challenges in a changing climate and experience climate related stress,” said Noah Fish, an agricultural reporter for Agweek.“It’s not only their operations that are undergoing this change, but it’s emotional stress; these are farmers that are the ones out there working every day in these conditions.”But grants offer relief, Fish said. The state of Minnesota is using federal grants to help farmers adapt to expanding droughts and a changing climates. Fish joined MPR News meteorologist Paul Huttner to talk about the kind of funding that is available to farmers and how it is helping.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
19/10/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate scientist and mom addresses work-life balance in new book
Finding balance in life can be a challenge for everyone.It can be especially hard to balance a life in climate work, politics and raising a family. That’s been Anna Farro Henderson’s experience, one she details in her new book “Core Samples: A Climate Scientist’s Experiments in Politics and Motherhood.”Farro Henderson joins MPR News Meteorologist Paul Huttner to talk about the climate crisis and encouraging young women to enter the STEM field. To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
9/10/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
‘Fingerprints of a warming world’ evident in Minnesota climate trends
Minnesota’s climate continues to shift. The trend toward warmer winters and more erratic precipitation patterns continues.“What we see globally and what we see right in our own backyards are the fingerprints of a warming world,” Heidi Roop, the Director of Minnesota’s Climate Adaptation Partnership, said. She added that we should expect these extremes to continue.“If we look out towards the end of the century, some of our future climate models show that our spring-time precipitation could be as much as 40 percent wetter and our summers around 20 percent dryer.”She spoke more about Minnesota’s climate trends with MPR News Chief Meteorologist Paul Huttner.
26/9/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate advocates support Walz, but Harris-Walz climate platform still unclear
Climate advocates are showing strong support for Gov. Tim Walz’s vice presidential campaign. They point to his record. “Walz was responsible, or at least, signed into law several climate action bills that are progressive no matter which state you live in,” said Kristoffer Tigue, who wrote about Walz’s climate record for Inside Climate News. “That includes a law from 2023 which requires Minnesota utilities to produce 100 percent of their electricity from carbon free sources by 2040. He also signed several other bills that do a lot to advance the effort to slow down climate change.” Tigue joined MPR News chief meteorologist Paul Huttner to talk about Walz’s record in Minnesota and what that might mean for the Harris-Walz ticket. “A lot of advocates and political analysts believe that the Harris-Walz ticket will probably walk a line that’s similar to what Biden has been doing in his last couple of years as president, which is taking kind of a moderate approach, trying to appeal to a broader audience, rather than appeasing a smaller, more progressive climate constituency,” Tigue said. But there’s not a lot to go on.“Both Walz and Harris have largely refrained from talking about climate change since announcing their campaign together, but in the debate with former President Trump earlier this month, Harris did address climate change, and the two have since released a platform, though the details on policy are still pretty slim,” she said.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
20/9/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Methane is rising as a potent greenhouse gas
A new report from the Global Carbon Project finds several sources of methane gas are on the rise.Sahrah Kaplan, climate and science reporter for the Washington Post says the powerful greenhouse gas is “the fastest way to heat the planet and we’re doing that at an ever accelerating rate.”Kaplan wrote about the Global Carbon Project report and joined Climate Cast to explain how agriculture as well as human influence are contributing to the rise in this potent greenhouse gas. To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
12/9/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Author of ‘The Parrot and the Igloo’ examines the history of climate change deniers
David Lipsky, author of “The Parrot and the Igloo: Climate and the Science of Denial,” talks about the history of climate change and those who deny the science behind human-caused climate change. To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
5/9/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change a factor in spread of bird flu that's keeping birthing cows out of State Fair
The State Fair gates are open – but there’s a noticeable absence in the Miracle of Birth Center: birthing cows and newborn calves. It’s all due to the spread of avian flu, also known as bird flu or H5N1. So how serious is the spread of avian flu, and what does climate change have to do with the spread of viruses between species? Izzy Ross is a climate solutions reporter for Interlochen Public Radio and wrote about the threat of bird flu spreading to dairy cows for Grist. Ross stopped by Climate Cast to talk about the link between bird flu and climate change.
22/8/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Woman takes French oil company to court for mother’s death
Recent abundant levels of rainfall across the state have pulled Minnesota out of drought for the first time since June 2022. Will this rainfall pattern continue? And how are Minnesota’s precipitation swings a symptom of climate change? Kenneth Blumenfeld with the Minnesota State Climatology Office talks about recent rainfall across the state and explains how both dry and wet patterns — sometimes lasting several months — are connected to climate change.
15/8/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The planet’s temperature inches closer to a ‘tipping point’
Scientists are concerned that Earth’s temperature rise is accelerating, and certain factors known as “tipping points” could speed up the process. What will that mean for the planet and what can be done to keep the planet warming at a fast pace? Andrew Freedman wrote about the new study for Axios and explains the research behind the warming climate report.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
8/8/2024 • 0 minutos, 1 segundo
Researchers plant ‘climate-smart’ trees from the south to save forests up north
Climate change is putting stress on the traditional spruce and pines in Minnesota’s northern forests — and there’s real concern about their future.So, researchers are planting trees from the southern parts of our state in hopes of saving our northern forests.It’s called assisted migration and University of Minnesota professor Julie Etterson is studying if it can be an effective strategy for reforesting and fighting climate change.
1/8/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
MPCA meteorologist keeps eye on wildfire smoke heading to Minnesota
An increasing number of wildfires in Canada and the western U.S. is pumping smoke toward Minnesota.But how much smoke will reach Minnesota? And how do meteorologists forecast wildfire smoke events and trends across the state? The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s supervisory meteorologist Matt Taraldsen talks about the wildfire smoke that sullies Minnesota’s blue skies and triggers air quality alerts.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
25/7/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Midwest transportation systems feel the brunt of climate change
Flash floods and extreme temperatures — both heat and cold — are having a negative impact on infrastructure across the Midwest. These extreme weather swings take a toll on roads, bridges and railroads, leading to headaches for travel and daily commutes.Kiley Price wrote about the threat for Inside Climate News and joined MPR News meteorologist Paul Huttner to explain what’s being done to address the aging infrastructure in the Midwest.
19/7/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Dams across the Midwest are aging, putting them at risk from the effects of climate change
Climate change-enhanced rainfall events threaten nearly 92,000 dams across the U.S. and many are over 100 years old — including dams in Minnesota. Climate reporter Kristoffer Tigue wrote about aging dams and the risk for extreme rainfall for Inside Climate News. Tigue joined MPR News meteorologist Paul Huttner to explain how extreme weather events pose a threat to dams in Minnesota and the Midwest. To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
12/7/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Lakes could help harness large amounts of clean energy from the sun using floating solar panels
Lakes are a part of Minnesota’s Identity. While the thousands of lakes are cherished for their recreational accessibility across the state, some of those pristine bodies of water could — one day — help generate a vast amount of clean energy through solar power. Matt Simon wrote about floating solar panels for Grist. Simon talked to MPR News meteorologist Paul Huttner about floatovoltaics.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
27/6/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How do you define clean energy? Minnesota climate group working on answer
Last year, the Minnesota Legislature passed a law requiring the state’s electrical utilities to transition to 100 percent carbon-free energy sources by 2040. That means replacing power sources that produce carbon dioxide such as coal and natural gas with renewable sources such as solar, wind, hydropower and biomass.But how do you define “carbon-free” and what guidelines will be used to make sure utilities are meeting that standard? “We’re really hoping that carbon-free actually means carbon-free,” said B. Rosas, a policy manager with the advocacy group Climate Generation. Rosas talked to Paul Huttner about the organization’s efforts. To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
20/6/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Drought-free, but for how long? How climate change affects dry and wet trends in Minnesota
Recent abundant levels of rainfall across the state have pulled Minnesota out of drought for the first time since June 2022. Will this rainfall pattern continue? And how are Minnesota’s precipitation swings a symptom of climate change? Kenneth Blumenfeld with the Minnesota State Climatology Office talks about recent rainfall across the state and explains how both dry and wet patterns — sometimes lasting several months — are connected to climate change.
13/6/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Minnesota launches new e-bike rebate program
Looking to buy a new e-bike? Well, the Minnesota Department of Revenue has a new rebate program to help with the costs. Assistant Commissioner Sarah Bronson from the Department of Revenue talks through details of the program and how to apply.
6/6/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Lawmakers pass much needed permitting reforms for clean energy projects as session wraps
The 2024 Minnesota Legislature session is a wrap. So, what got done this year with climate progress in Minnesota?Walker Orenstein is a reporter for the Star Tribune. He says the changes to the permitting process for clean energy projects passed by lawmakers is a major step forward.
23/5/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The impact of building codes on climate change
Heating and cooling our homes and buildings in Minnesota contribute about 40 percent of our state’s greenhouse gas emissions. What opportunity exists to reduce our carbon footprint by updating our building codes?MPR News correspondent Dan Kraker wrote about that recently and shared his key takeaways.
16/5/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A U of M scientist is using leaf glow to better track climate change
A scientist at the University of Minnesota may have found a better way to track the effects of climate change on Arctic and boreal regions like northern Minnesota where temperatures are rising at some of the fastest rates in the world. Rui Cheng, a professor in the Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering at the University of Minnesota, is behind the research on using leaf glow to monitor vegetation dynamics. While not visible under natural light, leaf glow can be detected using remote sensing and can provide important information about the health of Arctic-boreal ecosystems.Cheng shared more about the research on this week’s Climate Cast.
9/5/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Report shows Minnesota is leading the way in clean energy transition
Renewable energy sources provided 33 percent of Minnesota’s electricity last year, which is 10 percent higher than the national average according to a new report. So, what’s next for Minnesota’s clean energy transition?Amelia Cerling Hennes, managing director of public affairs for Clean Energy Economy MN, shared more about the state’s clean energy progress.
2/5/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
CNN chief climate correspondent on finding hope in a world of climate change
“I’m sorry we broke the sea and sky and shortened the wings of the nightingale. I’m sorry that the Great Barrier Reef is no longer great, that we value Amazon much more than the Amazon.”Those are the words of CNN’s chief climate correspondent Bill Weir from his new book called “Life as We Know It (Can Be).” He wrote it as a letter to his 4-year-old son River to read in the future.It’s a future where he hopes we’ve fixed our broken climate. Bill Weir, who began his career in Austin, shared more about the book on this week’s Climate Cast.
26/4/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
As hurricanes get more powerful, some scientists suggest a new category six
Hurricanes are getting so strong that some scientists say we should add a Category 6 to the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale.That’s out of a recent study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences looking at the link between stronger hurricanes and climate change.Senior Climate Reporter Andrew Freedman wrote about it for Axios.
18/4/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate denialism mapped to geography and political affiliation
A recent study shows nearly 15 percent of Americans “do not believe in climate change.”So, what drives climate denialism in the U.S.?Joshua Newell is a professor and co-director of the Center for Sustainable Systems. He was one of the authors of this research and broke down his findings.
11/4/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Red and blue pitches for electric vehicles?
A red and blue sales pitch for electric vehicles?That’s what some EV dealers are doing right here in Minnesota to convince prospective EV buyers of different political affiliations. Dan Gearino visited two dealerships in areas with different political leanings and wrote about what he saw for Inside Climate News.
4/4/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
New study shows climate change is already affecting food prices
A new paper shows increasing global average temperatures and more intense and frequent heat waves are already driving up the prices of food and other goods.To talk more about climate change and inflation is the lead author of that research, Maximilian Kotz with the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.
28/3/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Record-breaking ocean temperatures
Earth’s oceans have been reaching record-warm temperatures. Every day for the last 12 months.What is happening? How much is climate change driving the temperature spike? And how concerned are climate scientists?University of St. Thomas Professor John Abraham, one of the world’s leading ocean temperature researchers, talks about it.
21/3/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The green energy gridlock at the Capitol
More than 25 percent of Minnesota’s electricity now comes from renewable sources like wind and solar.Despite the progress and growth of green energy, there’s still a backlog of projects waiting approval is slowing the growth of clean energy in Minnesota. A new proposed bill being considered by the state would streamline the permitting process.Reporter Kristoffer Tigue wrote about this topic for Inside Climate News.To hear the full conversation, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
15/3/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Forecasting a record-breaking winter
Minnesota’s warmest winter on record was literally off the charts in several metrics. Just how unique was this winter? And how is our shifting climate impacting our daily weather forecasts?Pete Boulay is with the Minnesota State Climatologist Office. He keeps track of weather and climate records around Minnesota.
7/3/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
What an unseasonably warm winter will mean for farmers this year
The warmest winter on record has also brought some of the lowest snow cover on record to much of Minnesota.What does the lack of snow mean for Minnesota’s soils and farmers this year?Jeff Strock is a professor with the University of Minnesota Southwest Research and Outreach Center.
29/2/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate scientist Michael Mann wins defamation lawsuit against conservative bloggers
Well-known climate scientist Michael Mann recently won a million-dollar lawsuit against conservative bloggers.Mann alleged that he was defamed by the bloggers who said the climatologist “molested and tortured data.”So what precedent could this case set?Leigh Currie, the Director of Strategic Litigation with the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, breaks down what his win could mean for climate science.
22/2/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Super current El Niño and climate change hit the Galapagos Islands
Locals in the Galapagos say climate change and the current Super El Niño could be affecting the marine life and climate there.The Galapagos Islands sit on the Equator in the eastern Pacific Ocean, just west of Ecuador at the confluence of three major ocean currents.MPR meteorologist Sven Sundgaard just returned from the islands on a trip where he got a first-hand look at what’s happening.
16/2/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
New ‘green bank’ for climate projects set to launch this year
Minnesota’s first-ever “green bank” launches this year. The Minnesota Climate Innovation Finance Authority will distribute funding for green energy and other climate-friendly projects. The first projects from the $45 million pool could be funded early this summer.For more on the green bank is Pete Klein, interim executive director for the Minnesota Climate Innovation Finance Authority.
8/2/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Report pushes for more EPA regulations of carbon capture projects
A proposed carbon capture pipeline across the Midwest by Summit Carbon Solutions is awaiting approval from Iowa and other states. Minnesota approved the permit for it last year.The five-state, $5.5 billion pipeline system would capture carbon dioxide from ethanol plants and send it to North Dakota for underground storage.As more places, including ours, pursue carbon capture projects, what rules and monitoring mechanisms need to be in place to make sure things work as intended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions?Eric Schaeffer is Executive Director with the Environmental Integrity Project, which just released a report on the current federal rules for carbon capture projects — and what might be missing.
1/2/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Data confirm trend of warming global temperatures in last ten years
Last year was by far the warmest year on record globally. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and European datasets all confirm the numbers. That means the 10 warmest years on record globally are the past 10 years.How do climate scientists explain this unprecedented warming trend?Jared Rennie is a research scientist with NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information and he discussed what we should take away from the numbers.
25/1/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Take a tour of a fully electric and energy efficient home
Minnesota officials have set an ambitious goal for the state to be carbon-neutral by 2050.And our Getting to Green series has been digging deep into stories of the clean energy transition. What opportunities and obstacles lie on the path to reach a carbon neutral Minnesota milestone?MPR News correspondents Dan Kraker and Kirsti Marohn guest hosted a series of conversations to talk to experts and listeners about our state's energy future.As a part of that reporting, they toured the home of William and Kristin Mroz-Risse which is now fully electric and more energy efficient. Kristin works for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency as the GreenStep Cities and tribal nations coordinator. William works in the renewable energy sector.
18/1/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Northfield's new housing development tackles homelessness, poverty and climate change
A housing project that tackles homelessness, poverty, and climate change all in one.That’s the goal of Hillcrest Village in Northfield, Minnesota. It’s an emergency shelter and supportive housing development – powered entirely by the sun.Scott Wopata is Executive Director at Community Action Center, which was behind the project.
12/1/2024 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Minneapolis looks to fund climate action through minor hike in gas and energy bills
Anyone getting gas and electricity service in Minneapolis will see an estimated one dollar increase in their bills come next year.The money from the slight hike is meant to go towards helping people weatherize their homes and programs to reduce carbon emissions.It’s a part of the city’s Climate Legacy Initiative and officials say it will raise an additional $10 million each year starting in 2024 for climate action.Dave Orrick wrote about the plan for the Star Tribune and broke it down on Climate Cast.
21/12/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
U of M scientist advocates for developing countries at global climate summit
A major focus of this year’s global climate summit, COP28 or the Conference of the Parties, is the Loss and Damage Fund which was established at last year’s conference.The idea behind it is for developed nations to financially compensate developing countries dealing with the harmful — and very costly — impacts of climate change. On the first day of this year’s conference, global leaders agreed to operationalize that fund with some countries pledging as much as $100 million right away. The U.S. plans to contribute $17.5 million if Congress gives the green light. Still, some say a lot more will be needed — hundreds of billions more. Nfamara Dampha is a research scientist at the University of Minnesota’s Institute on the Environment and he’s taking part in the discussion at COP28 as a delegate for the Gambia. Last year, the small country was hit with its largest rainfall in more than thirty years, causing more than $125 million in damage. As these climate events continue, Dampha says developed countries not only have a legal responsibility to help vulnerable countries but also a “moral and ethical responsibility”.
7/12/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
St. John's student reflects on experience at COP28
The United Nations 28th global climate conference, also known as COP28, just wrapped up in Dubai.And this year a group of 20 students from the College of St. Benedict and Saint John’s University got to observe the heated discussions about climate change and fossil fuels.Finn Dolezal was a part of that group. He’s a sophomore majoring in economics and minoring in math at Saint John's. He shared more about his time at COP28.
7/12/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
U.S. report includes calls for Indigenous leadership and self-determination to fight climate change
The fifth National Climate Assessment came out last week. It’s an important report that lays out the impacts of climate change across the U.S.In it this year is a chapter on the specific ways climate change affects indigenous communities — and why indigenous leadership and self-determination are essential for addressing the climate crisis.One of the authors of that chapter is Mike Dockry, an assistant professor with the University of Minnesota Department of Forest Resources. He specializes in Tribal and Indigenous Natural Resource Management. He gave us a closer look at the chapter on Climate Cast.
30/11/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Minnesota initiative looks to boost production of sustainable aviation fuel
10 percent of U.S. transportation greenhouse gas emissions come from plane travel according to the Environmental Protection Agency. But a first-of-its kind initiative is looking to slash those numbers by creating a hub to scale the production of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). Estimates show that SAF can reduce the lifecycle carbon emissions of flying by more than 80 percent.Peter Frosch is CEO of the Greater Minneapolis St. Paul Regional Economic Development Partnership, one of the partners involved in the effort.
16/11/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Groups call for greater federal oversight of insurance industry
Insurance losses from climate-enhanced extreme weather disasters are changing the insurance landscape. And this week, several groups have sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and the Financial Stability Oversight Council to call for greater federal oversight of the insurance industry in light of soaring disaster costs.Anne Perrault, finance policy counsel with advocacy group Public Citizen, shared more about the asks.
10/11/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Farming in the face of climate extremes
President Biden made a visit to Minnesota farmers this week to highlight investments in our region’s rural economy.But with climate change-driven weather whiplash the last few years, how are our local farmers really doing?Dan Guenthner runs Common Harvest Farm near Osceola, WI. He spoke about the challenges of farming in the face of climate extremes.
2/11/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change is wreaking havoc on the global insurance market
Climate change is wreaking havoc on the global insurance market. That’s the takeaway from a piece in Grist that points out natural disasters now cost the U.S. insurance industry $100 billion a year.Lois Parshley wrote about the trends in the first of a 4-part series for Grist.
26/10/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change has some moving to the Midwest
Go Midwest, young man?That’s the title of a recent piece in Time Magazine that touts the Midwest as a place people will likely move to in the future. So which factors make the Midwest a potentially attractive place to relocate? Alana Semuels, the author of that piece, shared more about her findings.
19/10/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Follow Minnesota's green transition with MPR News Getting to Green series
Minnesota leaders set an ambitious goal to be carbon-neutral by 2050. What will it take to carry out Minnesota’s green energy transition?Here at MPR News we’re tracking Minnesota’s clean energy progress, in a series called Getting to Green.We talk about it with MPR News reporters Dan Kraker and Kirsti Marohn.
12/10/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
As new farm bill gets drafted, some hope for changes to support sustainable farming
An increase in water vapor in the atmosphere is driving more extreme weather around the world.How is that playing out here in Minnesota?John Abraham, Thermal Sciences Professor and Mechanical Engineering Program Director at University of St. Thomas, shared more about the little known but growing climate concern.
5/10/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The growing climate concern of water vapor
An increase in water vapor in the atmosphere is driving more extreme weather around the world.How is that playing out here in Minnesota?John Abraham, Thermal Sciences Professor and Mechanical Engineering Program Director at University of St. Thomas, shared more about the little known but growing climate concern.
28/9/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
United Nations calls for urgent action to protect children's rights
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is expanding its electric school bus program using three million dollars from the state’s settlement with Volkswagen over exaggerated fuel efficiency claims.This round of funding will cover the costs for eight more school buses and there will be future rounds in the near future. In addition, the Minnesota Department of Commerce and the Environmental Protection Agency will run separate pools of funding for electric school buses. Brian Timerson, who oversees the program for Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, shared more about the opportunities available to switch to electric school buses.
21/9/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Farmers drained jaw-dropping amounts of water from Minnesota aquifers in 2021
Drought and the nation’s hunger for mouth-watering french fries led large farms to pump significantly more groundwater than they’re allowed.
14/9/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Some yellow school buses are turning green this school year
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is expanding its electric school bus program using three million dollars from the state’s settlement with Volkswagen over exaggerated fuel efficiency claims.This round of funding will cover the costs for eight more school buses and there will be future rounds in the near future. In addition, the Minnesota Department of Commerce and the Environmental Protection Agency will run separate pools of funding for electric school buses. Brian Timerson, who oversees the program for Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, shared more about the opportunities available to switch to electric school buses.
7/9/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Cargo ship sets sail with 'WindWings' created by Minnesota's Cargill
Minnesota-based Cargill has developed modern sails they’re calling ‘WindWings’ that allow giant cargo ships to harness wind energy.Last week, the first ever vessel outfitted with the giant 123-foot sails embarked on a test journey from China to Brazil. It’s said the sails could help the ship dramatically slash its fuel costs and greenhouse gas emissions.Andrew Freedman from Axios shared more about the innovation and what it’ll take to decarbonize the marine shipping industry.
31/8/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Federal commission takes steps to speed up grid interconnection process
For the U.S. to meet its climate goals, we need more clean energy projects — projects that require space on the electrical grid.The trouble is: there’s a massive backlog. Some wind and solar projects have been waiting for years to be connected to electric grids. Now the Federal Electric Regulatory Commission (FERC) is taking action to speed up the connection process.Jeff St. John wrote about the changes for Canary Media, a newsletter focused on solutions to the climate crisis.
24/8/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Montana youths win case against the state for climate change harms
The heat is on for Minnesota this week and heat waves are making news across the world.Hospitals in Phoenix are treating burn patients from sizzling pavement. Tourists in Greece are evacuating fire zones.How can scientists gauge when heat events are normal and when they’re fueled by climate change?Climate Central chief meteorologist Bernadette Woods Placky talks about a tool she uses called the Climate Shift Index.
17/8/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Rulemaking process underway for new environmental justice areas
The heat is on for Minnesota this week and heat waves are making news across the world.Hospitals in Phoenix are treating burn patients from sizzling pavement. Tourists in Greece are evacuating fire zones.How can scientists gauge when heat events are normal and when they’re fueled by climate change?Climate Central chief meteorologist Bernadette Woods Placky talks about a tool she uses called the Climate Shift Index.
10/8/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Reducing the carbon footprint of the cannabis industry
The heat is on for Minnesota this week and heat waves are making news across the world.Hospitals in Phoenix are treating burn patients from sizzling pavement. Tourists in Greece are evacuating fire zones.How can scientists gauge when heat events are normal and when they’re fueled by climate change?Climate Central chief meteorologist Bernadette Woods Placky talks about a tool she uses called the Climate Shift Index.
3/8/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How much is climate change fueling intense heat across the world?
The heat is on for Minnesota this week and heat waves are making news across the world.Hospitals in Phoenix are treating burn patients from sizzling pavement. Tourists in Greece are evacuating fire zones.How can scientists gauge when heat events are normal and when they’re fueled by climate change?Climate Central chief meteorologist Bernadette Woods Placky talks about a tool she uses called the Climate Shift Index.
27/7/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Planting 'climate-smart' trees from the south to save forests up north
Climate change is putting stress on the traditional spruce and pines in Minnesota’s northern forests — and there’s real concern about their future.So, researchers are planting trees from the southern parts of our state in hopes of saving our northern forests.It’s called assisted migration and University of Minnesota professor Julie Etterson is studying if it can be an effective strategy for reforesting and fighting climate change.
20/7/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How to weatherize and super insulate your home
How can your home be a weapon in the fight to reduce climate change?One of the biggest opportunities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions is weatherizing and super insulating existing homes and buildings.And lawmakers this year set aside a big chunk of money to help people do just that.Tina Clarke has super insulated her own homes and helped others do the same. She shared her tips on how to get started.
13/7/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
What should students learn about climate change in schools?
A “constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment”.
That’s why 16 young people between ages 5 and 22 are suing the state of Montana seeking a transition to a less carbon-intensive energy policy.
The trial has been called historic in Montana and could have implications nationwide on climate litigation.
Amanda Eggert has been following the case for the Montana Free Press and she shared her reporting with Climate Cast.
29/6/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A group of young people are suing the state of Montana for their energy policy
A “constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment”.
That’s why 16 young people between ages 5 and 22 are suing the state of Montana seeking a transition to a less carbon-intensive energy policy.
The trial has been called historic in Montana and could have implications nationwide on climate litigation.
Amanda Eggert has been following the case for the Montana Free Press and she shared her reporting with Climate Cast.
22/6/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Some homes are becoming 'uninsurable' due to climate-related risks
Earth’s oceans are the hottest on record. That’s the finding from a recent paper in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. What effects could this have globally and in Minnesota?
8/6/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Earth’s oceans are the hottest on record
Earth’s oceans are the hottest on record. That’s the finding from a recent paper in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. What effects could this have globally and in Minnesota?
8/6/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
What can happen in a world without dams?
It’s said that water is life and trying to control and store water through massive dam projects has been a way of life for a long time, especially in the western U.S.
But it turns out dams emit greenhouse gas and can have environmental impacts. Just how much do they emit and why are some rivers better off left to flow naturally?
Stephen Hawley, author of Cracked: The Future of Dams in a Hot, Chaotic World, discusses what a world without dams could bring.
1/6/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
U of M to oversee multi-state effort to help unlock federal funding for climate projects
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
25/5/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
It's been a smoky week — what's the forecast ahead for air quality and wildfires?
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
18/5/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A U of M initiative looks to create climate-informed health care professionals
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
11/5/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Clean energy will require more power lines, but who should get to build them?
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
4/5/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The city of Minneapolis seeks input on new climate equity plan
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
27/4/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Minnesota's solar garden program ranks second in the nation, but some say it could do more
The latest United Nations climate report urges that the window of opportunity to prevent catastrophic climate change still exists — but is closing fast. What role do states, including Minnesota, play in keeping that window open?
15/4/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A new battery could soon make 1,000-mile-range EVs a reality
The search is on for an electric vehicle with a 1,000-mile range. And a new dime-sized battery may be a step in that direction.
Mohammad Asadi is a chemical engineer at Illinois Tech who was one of the people behind the discovery. He spoke with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner about the new technology and other potential uses for it.
15/4/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
IPCC calls for more urgent action. What's MN's role?
The latest United Nations climate report urges that the window of opportunity to prevent catastrophic climate change still exists — but is closing fast. What role do states, including Minnesota, play in keeping that window open?
30/3/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change could shift maple syrup season
Spring has officially begun, which means maple syrup season is in full swing. But a sugarmaker a the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum says the beginning and end of the season has fluctuated quite a bit as the climate changes.
23/3/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Building with climate change in mind will be crucial in the future
Minnesota’s northern forests are changing rapidly.
Warmer temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns are causing a decline in the growth and survival rates of our trees, particularly among spruce and fir. And with life spans in the decades, the swift changes are creating trouble.
Peter Reich with the University of Michigan has been keeping track of our northern forests and he discussed the future of our forests with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner.
16/3/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Northern forests struggle to adapt to climate change
Minnesota’s northern forests are changing rapidly.
Warmer temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns are causing a decline in the growth and survival rates of our trees, particularly among spruce and fir. And with life spans in the decades, the swift changes are creating trouble.
Peter Reich with the University of Michigan has been keeping track of our northern forests and he discussed the future of our forests with Climate Cast host Paul Huttner.
10/3/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The link between record temps and climate
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed a bill this month requiring 100 percent carbon-free electricity in Minnesota by 2040. The new law requires Minnesota to produce carbon-free energy from sources like nuclear, wind, and solar power.
So, how will Minnesota get to that goal?
Minnesota Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan discussed the roadmap on Climate Cast this week.
2/3/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
EV corridor coming to Minnesota
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed a bill this month requiring 100 percent carbon-free electricity in Minnesota by 2040. The new law requires Minnesota to produce carbon-free energy from sources like nuclear, wind, and solar power.
So, how will Minnesota get to that goal?
Minnesota Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan discussed the roadmap on Climate Cast this week.
23/2/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Rebroadcast: 10 years of Climate Cast
When MPR News’ Climate Cast debuted in January 2013, it was one of the few regular programs to address how a warming planet could change life as we know it.
That urgency has only grown. In 2023, climate change is one of the leading issues driving political, economical and societal change.
To celebrate Climate Cast’s 10th anniversary, MPR’s chief meteorologist Paul Huttner talked to an elite panel of experts about how climate change has evolved since Climate Cast began.
What does the latest science say about how fast the planet is warming now? What are the biggest climate change impacts here in Minnesota and around the world? How is public opinion adjusting? And how far have climate solutions advanced in the past 10 years?
This is a rebroadcast of the 10th anniversary Climate Cast.
Guests:
Katharine Hayhoe is widely recognized as one of the world’s leading climate scientists. Among other things, she is a professor at Texas Tech University and the chief scientist for The Nature Conservancy.
Bernadette Woods Placky is an Emmy Award-winning meteorologist and director of Climate Central's Climate Matters, a program that offers data analyses, graphics and other reporting resources to a growing network of more than 3,000 local TV meteorologists and journalists to help them tell local climate stories.
Jason Samenow is The Washington Post's weather editor and the popular Capital Weather Gang’s chief meteorologist.
Ed Maibach is the director of the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University. He also codirects the Climate Change in the American Mind polling project.
Jamie Alexander is the director of Drawdown Labs, which is Project Drawdown’s private sector testing ground for accelerating the adoption of climate solutions quickly, safely and equitably.
Jon Foley is the executive director of Project Drawdown, a leading resource for information and insight about climate solutions.
Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.
The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.
1. Raising our voices matters
Katharine Hayhoe: When I ask people to describe what they feel about climate change in one word, the answers are: scared, depressed, paralyzed, overwhelmed, angry, guilty, anxious and frightened. Those are entirely reasonable. But unless we recognize that our choices make a difference, we're not going to fix this issue.
Too often, we picture climate action like a giant boulder, sitting at the bottom of an impossibly steep cliff, with only a few hands on that boulder. We think, “why should I add my hand to that boulder? It's not going to move. It's pointless.” But when we look around and see all the action that's already happening, we realize that the giant boulder is already rolling down the hill in the right direction. And if I add my hand, and used my voice to encourage others around me to add theirs, it would go faster.
As Joan Baez famously said: “The antidote to anxiety and despair is action.” And we can't fix this alone, but together. I'm absolutely convinced we can do it. It all begins when we use our voices to call for action wherever we live, work, study, worship, play. We can use our voices for a better future for us all.
2. Climate change impacts are more expensive than ever
Bernadette Woods Placky: When we experience an extreme event, some of the impacts are obvious for the immediate toll on lives and our health. But it doesn't end after the event, especially in these communities that don't have as many resources and are the most vulnerable among us. That's where we have to continue making these connections: a storm is connected to climate change, but it is also connected to what you're already paying to recover and how that factors into your future costs.
For instance, the Flood Insurance Program has gone through some major ups and downs. California and parts of the West are really trying to figure out how they're going to cover people with wildfire insurance, especially when affordable housing is already a massive issue, then you add all these extra pieces on top of it with the economy and COVID. It's affecting people who have really worked hard most of their life and done everything right out of their homes. We've gotten to a point now where the cost of taking action and leading toward climate solutions is more affordable than what we're paying in the impacts.
3. U.S. systems are not built for such extreme climates
Jason Samenow: We've seen about 1.2 degrees Celsius of change. But the increase in extremes is increasing disproportionately. In other words, we're seeing a bigger change and extremes than you might expect for that amount of warming. That has climate scientists particularly concerned because if we go to 1.5 Celsius warming or even 2 degrees Celsius of warming, we're going to see these extremes continue to proliferate.
Our systems are built for a climate that was a degree cooler, so the cost of trying to adapt to these extremes is going to be profound. It makes it incumbent in planning decisions to think about where we're headed in terms of the different extremes that we're facing and how they're changing.
When we saw Hurricane Ida go through and you saw 4 inches of rain falling in an hour, the systems there weren't built to withstand that. We see these extremes continuing to get worse, the wildfires increasing the speed at which they spread, hurricanes like this past hurricane season — with that 15-foot surge in southwest Florida or around Fort Myers — and you add sea level rise on top of that. There's just a lot of thought that needs to be put into planning across the different economic sectors, whether you're talking about agriculture, health, water, all of these different systems are very vulnerable to extremes and they are proliferating before our very eyes.
4. Weather can solve climate change impacts
Bernadette Woods Placky: One of the ways we're solving this is through wind and solar energy. That is weather, and it is dramatically shifting how we get our electricity. As the society can move as much as possible over to electrically-driven cars and transportation, and within our home units, businesses and buildings, then we power that with multiple forms of renewable energy. But again, I'm honing in on the forecasting aspect of this. This is weather powering our future. That's one of the areas where we're already seeing tremendous growth, and we'll see even more.
5. There are 5 key truths about global warming
Ed Maibach: Me and my colleague Tony Leiserowitz have been conducting a poll that we call “Climate change in the American mind” every six months since 2008. One of the things that we've learned from our research is that there are five key truths about global warming. People who understand them are much more likely to be engaged in doing something about the problem. Those five key truths are:
Global warming is real and the proportion of Americans who understand it is 7 out of 10.
Global warming is human caused.
Global warming is bad for people in a whole variety of ways
There's hope actions we take will make a difference.
Experts agree that global warming is human-caused, no matter what you hear about it.
6. More than half of Americans are both alarmed and concerned about global warming
Ed Maibach: There's really no such thing as the general public. That never really does justice to the way people really think and feel about issues. So we used our survey data back in 2008 to identify distinct ways of seeing the global warming issue among the American people. We found six distinct categories: the alarmed, the concerned, the cautious, the disengaged, the doubtful and the dismissive. The top-two categories — alarmed and concerned — make up the majority with 53 percent.
Ten years ago, fewer than 3 in 10 Americans felt that climate change was changing the weather here in the U.S. and now it's almost two-thirds, so more than 6 in 10 people who get the fact that the weather isn't what it used to be.
7. Politicians stopped denying climate change and started acting on it
Ed Maibach: In the most recent election, we really didn't see Republican candidates talking about climate change and I would contend that's actually a good thing. Normally during prior election seasons, Republican candidates used to speak out against climate change, against the belief in our human-caused climate change, and against taking action on climate change. But that didn't happen in the most recent election. I think the reason why is because that doesn't play with young conservatives in America anymore. They actually would like their leaders to acknowledge the realities of the problems that we face. I think that's a really important step forward, and I hope it continues to play out. America will be a much better country.
Another thing that I think everybody should keep their eye on is the fact that Congress did pass the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which is a major climate solutions bill. So a whole lot of money is going to be flowing through federal agencies to help Americans, homeowners, renters and business owners start to participate in the clean energy revolution, at a much more affordable price than they could have previously participated. My guess is that public enthusiasm for climate solutions is about to skyrocket.
8. Overall emissions have decreased since 2007
Jon Foley: At the national level, this surprises a lot of people. But the United States as a whole has actually been seeing a decrease in all of our emissions overall, as a country, by about 20 percent since 2007. Most people don't expect that to be true, but it is. Even though our economy and our population have grown, our emissions have been going down since 2007.
That's true in Minnesota, too. And what's also really interesting is the price of solar photovoltaics and wind power has fallen more than anybody ever expected. Even the optimists have been caught off guard by how cheap solar and wind have gotten. Solar is now the cheapest form of energy humans have ever had in our entire history, so no wonder it's finally winning. It's beating coal, and it's going to beat natural gas in the marketplace really quickly. That's great news.
9. Big actors can move things faster
Jamie Alexander: Another thing that I'm looking at is what the big actors in society, such as large corporations, are doing to help us move much faster than any one individual can. We have a lot of big businesses in the Twin Cities that have a lot of clout and influence and can really help us move money much more quickly than any one individual into climate solutions. These big actors in society can help us shift away from the source of the problem and toward the solutions.
Large corporations can shift their banking practices away from those banks to finance the sources of the problem and toward climate solutions. One of the things I'm looking at up here in Duluth, where I live, is how we're going to work to transition like workers in the Iron Range, for example, and how mining is going to be. I think that's going to be a really important thing to get right.
10. Little changes can make a big difference
Jon Foley: We can do a lot of things in our homes that save us money, like retrofitting our homes when we have the chance, taking advantage of tax breaks, insulating and weatherizing our homes, improving our heating and cooling systems to new efficient made-in-America heat pumps. Also small things like reducing food waste, eating our leftovers, making sure we take home the doggie bag, shifting our diets to things that are a little bit more climate friendly. We can also do the talking about it and engage in a larger conversation, not just in the voting booth, but every day about what we buy, how we talk, what we post on Facebook, what we listen to, how we chat about it. Even at work, asking questions about our retirement funds, what our company is doing about climate change and so on. We can be part of a larger democratic conversation as a society that really brings climate change to front and center but also all the benefits climate solutions bring to us too.
Click play on the audio player above to listen, or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast to hear the whole thing — Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or RSS.
17/2/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan on Minnesota's roadmap to carbon-free electricity by 2040
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed a bill this month requiring 100 percent carbon-free electricity in Minnesota by 2040. The new law requires Minnesota to produce carbon-free energy from sources like nuclear, wind, and solar power.
So, how will Minnesota get to that goal?
Minnesota Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan discussed the roadmap on Climate Cast this week.
16/2/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How to spot and combat climate misinformation and disinformation
The Polar Bear population is plummeting around Canada’s Hudson Bay. The Canadian government study shows there are 27% fewer bears in just the past 5 years.
How much is climate change driving the shift? MPR News Meteorologist Sven Sundgaard paid a visit to see the Hudson Bay bears in Churchill, Manitoba last November.
9/2/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
5 fast facts about the lack of ice on Lake Superior this year
The Polar Bear population is plummeting around Canada’s Hudson Bay. The Canadian government study shows there are 27% fewer bears in just the past 5 years.
How much is climate change driving the shift? MPR News Meteorologist Sven Sundgaard paid a visit to see the Hudson Bay bears in Churchill, Manitoba last November.
2/2/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The polar bear capital of the world is losing its bears
The Polar Bear population is plummeting around Canada’s Hudson Bay. The Canadian government study shows there are 27% fewer bears in just the past 5 years.
How much is climate change driving the shift? MPR News Meteorologist Sven Sundgaard paid a visit to see the Hudson Bay bears in Churchill, Manitoba last November.
26/1/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
10 climate lessons we’ve learned in 10 years of Climate Cast
When MPR News’ Climate Cast debuted in January 2013, it was one of the few regular programs to address how a warming planet could change life as we know it.
That urgency has only grown. In 2023, climate change is one of the leading issues driving political, economical and societal change.
To celebrate Climate Cast’s 10th anniversary, MPR’s chief meteorologist Paul Huttner talked to an elite panel of experts about how climate change has evolved since Climate Cast began.
What does the latest science say about how fast the planet is warming now? What are the biggest climate change impacts here in Minnesota and around the world? How is public opinion adjusting? And how far have climate solutions advanced in the past 10 years?
Guests:
Katharine Hayhoe is widely recognized as one of the world’s leading climate scientists. Among other things, she is a professor at Texas Tech University and the chief scientist for The Nature Conservancy.
Bernadette Woods Placky is an Emmy Award-winning meteorologist and director of Climate Central's Climate Matters, a program that offers data analyses, graphics and other reporting resources to a growing network of more than 3,000 local TV meteorologists and journalists to help them tell local climate stories.
Jason Samenow is The Washington Post's weather editor and the popular Capital Weather Gang’s chief meteorologist.
Ed Maibach is the director of the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University. He also codirects the Climate Change in the American Mind polling project.
Jamie Alexander is the director of Drawdown Labs, which is Project Drawdown’s private sector testing ground for accelerating the adoption of climate solutions quickly, safely and equitably.
Jon Foley is the executive director of Project Drawdown, a leading resource for information and insight about climate solutions.
The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.
1. Raising our voices matters
Katharine Hayhoe: When I ask people to describe what they feel about climate change in one word, the answers are: scared, depressed, paralyzed, overwhelmed, angry, guilty, anxious and frightened. Those are entirely reasonable. But unless we recognize that our choices make a difference, we're not going to fix this issue.
Too often, we picture climate action like a giant boulder, sitting at the bottom of an impossibly steep cliff, with only a few hands on that boulder. We think, “why should I add my hand to that boulder? It's not going to move. It's pointless.” But when we look around and see all the action that's already happening, we realize that the giant boulder is already rolling down the hill in the right direction. And if I add my hand, and used my voice to encourage others around me to add theirs, it would go faster.
As Joan Baez famously said: “The antidote to anxiety and despair is action.” And we can't fix this alone, but together. I'm absolutely convinced we can do it. It all begins when we use our voices to call for action wherever we live, work, study, worship, play. We can use our voices for a better future for us all.
2. Climate change impacts are more expensive than ever
Bernadette Woods Placky: When we experience an extreme event, some of the impacts are obvious for the immediate toll on lives and our health. But it doesn't end after the event, especially in these communities that don't have as many resources and are the most vulnerable among us. That's where we have to continue making these connections: a storm is connected to climate change, but it is also connected to what you're already paying to recover and how that factors into your future costs.
For instance, the Flood Insurance Program has gone through some major ups and downs. California and parts of the West are really trying to figure out how they're going to cover people with wildfire insurance, especially when affordable housing is already a massive issue, then you add all these extra pieces on top of it with the economy and COVID. It's affecting people who have really worked hard most of their life and done everything right out of their homes. We've gotten to a point now where the cost of taking action and leading toward climate solutions is more affordable than what we're paying in the impacts.
3. U.S. systems are not built for such extreme climates
Jason Samenow: We've seen about 1.2 degrees Celsius of change. But the increase in extremes is increasing disproportionately. In other words, we're seeing a bigger change and extremes than you might expect for that amount of warming. That has climate scientists particularly concerned because if we go to 1.5 Celsius warming or even 2 degrees Celsius of warming, we're going to see these extremes continue to proliferate.
Our systems are built for a climate that was a degree cooler, so the cost of trying to adapt to these extremes is going to be profound. It makes it incumbent in planning decisions to think about where we're headed in terms of the different extremes that we're facing and how they're changing.
When we saw Hurricane Ida go through and you saw 4 inches of rain falling in an hour, the systems there weren't built to withstand that. We see these extremes continuing to get worse, the wildfires increasing the speed at which they spread, hurricanes like this past hurricane season — with that 15-foot surge in southwest Florida or around Fort Myers — and you add sea level rise on top of that. There's just a lot of thought that needs to be put into planning across the different economic sectors, whether you're talking about agriculture, health, water, all of these different systems are very vulnerable to extremes and they are proliferating before our very eyes.
4. Weather can solve climate change impacts
Bernadette Woods Placky: One of the ways we're solving this is through wind and solar energy. That is weather, and it is dramatically shifting how we get our electricity. As the society can move as much as possible over to electrically-driven cars and transportation, and within our home units, businesses and buildings, then we power that with multiple forms of renewable energy. But again, I'm honing in on the forecasting aspect of this. This is weather powering our future. That's one of the areas where we're already seeing tremendous growth, and we'll see even more.
5. There are 5 key truths about global warming
Ed Maibach: Me and my colleague Tony Leiserowitz have been conducting a poll that we call “Climate change in the American mind” every six months since 2008. One of the things that we've learned from our research is that there are five key truths about global warming. People who understand them are much more likely to be engaged in doing something about the problem. Those five key truths are:
Global warming is real and the proportion of Americans who understand it is 7 out of 10.
Global warming is human caused.
Global warming is bad for people in a whole variety of ways
There's hope actions we take will make a difference.
Experts agree that global warming is human-caused, no matter what you hear about it.
6. More than half of Americans are both alarmed and concerned about global warming
Ed Maibach: There's really no such thing as the general public. That never really does justice to the way people really think and feel about issues. So we used our survey data back in 2008 to identify distinct ways of seeing the global warming issue among the American people. We found six distinct categories: the alarmed, the concerned, the cautious, the disengaged, the doubtful and the dismissive. The top-two categories — alarmed and concerned — make up the majority with 53 percent.
Ten years ago, fewer than 3 in 10 Americans felt that climate change was changing the weather here in the U.S. and now it's almost two-thirds, so more than 6 in 10 people who get the fact that the weather isn't what it used to be.
7. Politicians stopped denying climate change and started acting on it
Ed Maibach: In the most recent election, we really didn't see Republican candidates talking about climate change and I would contend that's actually a good thing. Normally during prior election seasons, Republican candidates used to speak out against climate change, against the belief in our human-caused climate change, and against taking action on climate change. But that didn't happen in the most recent election. I think the reason why is because that doesn't play with young conservatives in America anymore. They actually would like their leaders to acknowledge the realities of the problems that we face. I think that's a really important step forward, and I hope it continues to play out. America will be a much better country.
Another thing that I think everybody should keep their eye on is the fact that Congress did pass the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which is a major climate solutions bill. So a whole lot of money is going to be flowing through federal agencies to help Americans, homeowners, renters and business owners start to participate in the clean energy revolution, at a much more affordable price than they could have previously participated. My guess is that public enthusiasm for climate solutions is about to skyrocket.
8. Overall emissions have decreased since 2007
Jon Foley: At the national level, this surprises a lot of people. But the United States as a whole has actually been seeing a decrease in all of our emissions overall, as a country, by about 20 percent since 2007. Most people don't expect that to be true, but it is. Even though our economy and our population have grown, our emissions have been going down since 2007.
That's true in Minnesota, too. And what's also really interesting is the price of solar photovoltaics and wind power has fallen more than anybody ever expected. Even the optimists have been caught off guard by how cheap solar and wind have gotten. Solar is now the cheapest form of energy humans have ever had in our entire history, so no wonder it's finally winning. It's beating coal, and it's going to beat natural gas in the marketplace really quickly. That's great news.
9. Big actors can move things faster
Jamie Alexander: Another thing that I'm looking at is what the big actors in society, such as large corporations, are doing to help us move much faster than any one individual can. We have a lot of big businesses in the Twin Cities that have a lot of clout and influence and can really help us move money much more quickly than any one individual into climate solutions. These big actors in society can help us shift away from the source of the problem and toward the solutions.
Large corporations can shift their banking practices away from those banks to finance the sources of the problem and toward climate solutions. One of the things I'm looking at up here in Duluth, where I live, is how we're going to work to transition like workers in the Iron Range, for example, and how mining is going to be. I think that's going to be a really important thing to get right.
10. Little changes can make a big difference
Jon Foley: We can do a lot of things in our homes that save us money, like retrofitting our homes when we have the chance, taking advantage of tax breaks, insulating and weatherizing our homes, improving our heating and cooling systems to new efficient made-in-America heat pumps. Also small things like reducing food waste, eating our leftovers, making sure we take home the doggie bag, shifting our diets to things that are a little bit more climate friendly. We can also do the talking about it and engage in a larger conversation, not just in the voting booth, but every day about what we buy, how we talk, what we post on Facebook, what we listen to, how we chat about it. Even at work, asking questions about our retirement funds, what our company is doing about climate change and so on. We can be part of a larger democratic conversation as a society that really brings climate change to front and center but also all the benefits climate solutions bring to us too.
Click play on the audio player above to listen, or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast to hear the whole thing — Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or RSS.
25/1/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The impacts of climate change on our health — from our bodies to our cells
Some might scoff at the idea that climate change affects all of us, but doctors say it does. It turns out warmer temperatures, wildfire smoke and bad air quality affect our health … right down to our cells!
MPR News host Cathy Wurzer spoke with Dr. Rick Woychik and Dr. Gwen Collman from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences on their research into this for Climate Cast.
19/1/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate trends and news to keep an eye on in 2023
Last year was a banner year for clean energy with booms in solar and wind energy as well as the signing of the Inflation Reduction Act, the biggest climate legislation ever. What might be in store for 2023?
Dan Gearino of Inside Climate News joined Climate Cast to share his predictions on potential challenges and breakthroughs ahead.
Click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast to hear more.
12/1/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Planning to buy a new electric vehicle? It may be worth it to wait
New tax incentives on electric vehicles kicked in on January 1st, 2023. If you’re in the market for an EV, how can you cash in?
Automotive and energy writer Sean Tucker wrote about it for Kelly Blue Book.
Click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast to hear more.
5/1/2023 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A year-end review of climate stories and news on Climate Cast
A look back at some of the most memorable climate news, science, and solutions from 2022.
29/12/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Towards a green future: the biggest progress in climate solutions across the state
There were ample climate challenges this year. There were also major developments in climate solutions.
MPR News reporters Kirsti Marohn, Dan Kraker, and Dan Gunderson share their top stories from across the state in 2022.
22/12/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A year of climate whiplash: from wet and rainy to flash drought
What are Minnesota’s biggest climate highlights of this year? And where are we headed next?
15/12/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The effects of 'pink snow' and 'glacier blood' on our climate
‘Pink snow’ and ‘glacier blood’? What is it and how does it affect our water supply with climate change?
8/12/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate signals from the sparrows in the sky
Birds are sentinel species when it come to our changing climate. And even subtle climate shifts can have outsized impacts.
1/12/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Record low levels of the Mississippi River cause major problems for grain
The Mississippi River reached record lows in the southern U.S. this fall causing major problems for the 60% of U.S. grain harvest that’s typically shipped down America’s largest river.
17/11/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Dire warnings from world leaders at annual global climate conference
The United Nations’ COP27 global climate summit of world leaders takes place this week. And the need for global cooperation against climate change is more urgent than ever.
10/11/2022 • 0
A Minnesota hazelnut with unique climate fighting abilities
The University of Minnesota’s Forever Green Initiative is developing special crops that can improve crop productivity and fight climate change. One of which is a hybrid hazelnut grown regeneratively that’s packed with flavor and good for the environment.
3/11/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Renewable jobs boom continues but how long can it last?
There are now 12.7 million jobs worldwide in renewable energy including 700,000 new jobs in the past year alone. The growth of renewable jobs has been impressive but how long can this boom last?
27/10/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Trees are dying across the state
Forestry and climate experts say Minnesota’s extreme whiplash between soggy years and extreme drought recently is killing our trees.
20/10/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The climate change superstars few have heard about
There are about 6 million acres of peatlands in Minnesota — nearly 10% of our state. And it turns out, peat bogs have climate change fighting superpowers.
6/10/2022 • 0
Minnesota joins two newly formed Midwest hydrogen hubs
Hydrogen may be a lesser-known climate-friendly fuel solution — but it’s gaining traction quickly.
6/10/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The potent greenhouse gas we need to talk more about
Carbon dioxide gets most of the climate change headlines but methane has 82 times more warming potential than carbon dioxide over a 20-year timespan.
29/9/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How climate change intensifies extreme weather
The summer of 2022 was marked by floods, droughts, and hurricanes. How did climate change supercharge these events?
22/9/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How a rural renaissance is transforming energy systems
How are small towns building clean energy futures? L. Michelle Moore, author of “Rural Renaissance: Revitalizing America’s Hometowns through Clean Power,” shares examples of how rural towns are taking on the biggest ideas to transform our energy systems.
15/9/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Fair offers chance to learn about climate solutions
Minnesota farmers weren’t just eyeing the latest tractors on display at the state fair this year. Many made their way over to the Eco Building to ask how they can rent their land out to solar developers.
9/9/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Fair offers opportunity to see fresh crop of EVs
Curious about the Ford F150 Lightning or Mustang Mach-E? Head to the Minnesota State Fair to learn more.
2/9/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Small temp change can have big impact on boreal forests
A new study suggests that even small temperature changes can have a big effect on our boreal forests.
26/8/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
How climate change aggravates pathogenic diseases
Climate change is worsening more than half of all known human pathogenic diseases -- including those spread by mosquitoes and ticks in Minnesota.
19/8/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
28 percent of U.S. power was from renewables in April
Why did renewables do so well in April? And how did Minnesota do? Gregg Mast, executive director of Clean Energy Economy MN joined Climate Cast this week to talk about it.
11/8/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate scientists heartened by Senate climate deal
Climate scientist and author Michael Mann tells Climate Cast, that while it stops short of the 50 percent emissions drop we need, the climate deal now poised to pass the Senate will be “the most progress we will have made in addressing the climate crisis — ever — from the standpoint of Congressional action.”
5/8/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
MnDOT exploring ways to reduce C02-intensive concrete
The experimental pavement mixes incorporate recycled bottles, fiber and other materials to reduce the proportion of concrete needed. The agency is also looking at whether it can sequester carbon in its pavement.
29/7/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Tour TV legend Don Shelby's ultra-green Excelsior home
From 80-foot wells, to a secret passageway leading to a state-of-the-art geothermal system, to a stone statue signifying the people most at risk from climate change, former WCCO news anchor and climate advocate Don Shelby has built a home meant to inspire others to act.
22/7/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change through a camera lens
North Shore photographer Bryan Hansel says climate change can make for more dramatic photos — but also risk and changing scenery.
15/7/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
EVs to make up 60 percent of new car sales by 2035
Carmakers produced more electric vehicles in 2021, while the share of new gasoline and diesel cars dipped 9 percent.
2/7/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Wind energy is helping fuel rural economies
A recent study found local incomes rise by around 5 percent and home values by 2.6 percent in areas near large wind projects.
24/6/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Shareholders push companies to address climate change
According to the resolution, the company is not doing enough to address climate change, while also paying out settlements associated with it.
17/6/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Recorded atmospheric CO2 hits new record
Atmospheric carbon dioxide is increasing 2 to 4 parts per million every year. That’s compared to a total increase of 80 ppm over 6,000 years when Earth was coming out of the Ice Age.
9/6/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Solar is now the 'cheapest energy in history'
Solar projects are now roughly half the price of coal and natural gas projects.
3/6/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
The 'zero landfill' promise often means burning waste — which is better?
Some major companies are now burning waste in incinerators that it gets out of landfills, where it can release methane into the atmosphere.
But burning it can release carbon and other toxins into the air. So, what’s the most climate-friendly way for companies to handle bulk waste they can’t recycle?
Katie Schoolov covers Amazon for CNBC and recently looked into this. She joined Climate Cast to share her findings.
To hear the episode, click play on the audio player above or subscribe to the Climate Cast podcast.
27/5/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
University of Minnesota Morris launches battery program
The University of Minnesota Morris and West Central Research and Outreach Center have launched a new center for battery technology.
19/5/2022 • 0 minutos, 1 segundo
How companies are reducing food waste
An estimated 35 percent — or $408 billion worth — of food in the United States goes to waste, emitting methane and creating inefficiencies in carbon-heavy supply chains.
12/5/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Forest loss in 2021 emitted as much carbon as India does
Forests are supposed to help us remove carbon from the atmosphere. But forest loss to development and fires last year meant some forests added carbon to the atmosphere.
6/5/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
A new tool lets metro residents track region's tree canopy
Growing Shade helps city leaders, nonprofits, and residents target efforts to plant trees to the areas that need them most.
29/4/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change drives longer, more intense pollen seasons
Growing seasons are getting longer and plants are emitting more pollen as temperatures and carbon dioxide increase.
The taxpayer funded crop insurance program is propping up farmers who continue to plant in frequently flooded fields.
14/4/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
2021 was a boom year for batteries
Battery storage capacity in the United States more than doubled last year. But supply chain issues and access to raw materials could slow that growth this year.
7/4/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Methane reduction could help save Arctic sea ice
By the 2030s, research suggests the Arctic could see its first summer with no sea ice at all. But quick action on methane could help.
31/3/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
High temperatures in Antarctica stun climate scientists
Climate scientists were stunned last week when temperatures in Antarctica spiked 50 to 90 degrees higher than average for March.
24/3/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
MN could see 55 fewer days with snow underfoot by 2100
A new study says Minnesota winters and summers will be significantly warmer by the turn of the century.
17/3/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
War in Ukraine complicates war on climate change
Global leaders are calling for increased oil production outside of Russia at a time when scientists say the time to act on climate change is now.
10/3/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change is already driving global migration
A lead author of the latest United Nations’ climate report says climate migration is already happening in many places.
3/3/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change and your cup of joe
Coffee is a very finicky crop, needing just the right “Goldilocks” climate and altitude to produce rich, quality brews. So naturally, climate change is taking a toll.
24/2/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Minnesota is seeing fewer days with extreme cold
The shift in cold weather trends has affected everything from when you can begin ice fishing each year, to what you can plant in your yard, to the management of invasive pests.
17/2/2022 • 0 minutos, 0 segundos
Climate change brings danger to butterfly sanctuaries
More frequent severe storms and subtle temperature shifts are threatening Monarchs in Mexico’s butterfly sanctuaries.