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W


Centers Control


for and


Disease Preven-


tion, roughly 700 people die from heat-related deaths annually in America.


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keeps the body warm, blood pressure increas- es and can kill through strokes, heart attacks, and respiratory diseases.


One of the biggest factors in the


number of deaths in Europe versus the U.S. is access to air conditioning. According to The Breakthrough


Institute, a global research center, it is estimated that about 5.1 million deaths are associated with “non-optimal tem- peratures.” Of those, the group found that “4.6


million are associated with colder than optimum temperatures, and 0.5 mil- lion are associated with hotter than optimum temperatures.” Because of warmer weather, it


noted that the number of weather- related deaths has decreased “partly due to a reduction in cold deaths.” While heat poses health risks,


cold weather can infl ict graver harm. Because cold restricts blood fl ow that


“Aside from freezing to death,


frostbite, and trauma from slippery streets, all-cause mortality is increased, including cardiovascular disease from ‘sludging of the blood,’” said Dr. Jane Orient, a physician who leads Doctors for Disaster Preparedness. While Orient’s group doesn’t dis- count the “real dangers” that stem from excessive sun exposure, including heat exhaustion and skin cancer, it warns that staying warm this winter could prove challenging. It recommends people stock up


on emergency blankets and sleeping bags and warns that thanks to newly proposed Biden administration regu- lations, portable generators may be “unaff ordable or impossible to obtain.” A proposed Consumer Product Safe-


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ty Commission rule would limit the amount of carbon monoxide a product can emit. The commission essentially acknowledged that 95% of portable gas generators on the market cannot com- ply with its new standard, which could spark a massive shortage. The new rule comes as the estimated


5 million households that use portable gas generators in the event of a power outage face an increased risk of black- outs, thanks to an eff ort to switch to “green energy” to produce electricity. “Preparations need to be made


in advance,” the newsletter states. “Remember that weather-dependent electrical generators don’t work in bad weather.”


Achieving “climate goals,” such as increasing electric vehicles, will not help, warns Orient. If every country in the world did this, the predicted decrease in average global temperature would be 0.0002 F.


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