Section:GDN 1N PaGe:24 Edition Date:190821 Edition:01 Zone: Sent at 20/8/2019 17:06 cYanmaGentaYellowb
- The Guardian Wednesday 21 Au g u st 2019
24
In G2
For ever Friends
Why so many people
are still watching old
episodes of the sitcom
Page 8
Boiling point
Global heating
hits poorest
areas of cities
Pam Radtke Russell
New Orleans
B
etween record heat and
rain, this summer’s
weather patterns
have indicated, once
again, that the US
climate is changing.
Cities, where more than 80% of
the nation’s population live, are
disproportionately hit by these
changes, not only because of their
huge populations but because of
their existing – often inadequate
- infrastructure.
In urban areas, heatwaves are
exacerbated by vehicles , industrial
processes and the presence of heat-
retaining concrete and asphalt. And
it is in cities – especially in low-lying
poorer areas – where record rainfall
often accumulates.
“People are coming into urban
areas and they cannot be stopped,”
says Chandana Mitra, an associate
professor of geosciences at
Auburn University, who studies
the impact of heat on cities. Mitra
World
Climate emergency
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