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New Jersey remains “ground zero” for climate change in the Mid-Atlantic

The NJ Climate Change Report
NJDEP
The NJ Climate Change Report

State officials have long called New Jersey “ground zero” for climate change in the Mid-Atlantic.

The summer of 2022 was the third warmest summer on record, with a drought warning from the Department of Environmental Protection that lasted four months. Dr. James Shope, the applied climatologist at the New Jersey Climate Change Resource Center at Rutgers University, said it could be a “glimpse of the future.”

“Our rainfall in the future during the summer isn't projected to change very much. And combine that with higher temperatures, it means that we think we're going to be seeing drier drought conditions more frequently moving forward.”

The prediction is a highlight of New Jersey's annual “State Climate Report 2022,” released this week.

Increasing temperatures could lead to more heat-related hospitalizations and deaths in the coming years, especially in vulnerable communities. According to the center’s Heat Vulnerability Index, inland urban areas like Camden, Trenton, and Newark are more prone to negative heat effects due to paved surfaces and a lack of vegetation contributing to what is known as urban “heat islands.”

Residents in several rural areas, including parts of Salem, Cape May, Burlington, Gloucester, and Ocean Counties are also at risk for heat health effects

“Our most vulnerable aren't just in our urban locations. When it comes to heat, you have a number of more rural communities that are also very susceptible.”

Sea levels along the Jersey Shore are also expected to rise up to 1 foot by the end of the decade; a trend that could cause almost year-round flooding in places like Atlantic City by the turn of the century.

By 2100, average temperatures in New Jersey are expected to increase by up to five degrees Fahrenheit with low carbon emissions predictions and by up to 10 degrees Fahrenheit in higher emission scenarios.

The report comes just days after the Murphy Administration unveiled long-awaited environmental justice rules intended to alleviate health risks in over polluted cities.

When asked about the report’s findings on Friday, Gov. Phil Murphy said the state has more work to do to help adapt to the changing climate.

“I don't think any state can touch our record on the environment over the past five-and-a-half years. But everything you see around us, reminds you, you got to keep your foot on the gas pedal here, you got to really keep acting,”

New Jersey became the first state in the U.S. in 2020 to require mandatory permit denials for new or existing power plants and similar facilities if an environmental justice analysis determines a new facility will have a disproportionately negative impact on overburdened communities.

NOTE: Tennyson Donyea's report is part of WBGO's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion series made possible in part by a grant from The Fund for New Jersey.

Doug Doyle has been News Director at WBGO since 1998 and has taken his department to new heights in coverage and recognition. Doug and his staff have received more than 250 awards from organizations like PRNDI (now PMJA), AP, New York Association of Black Journalists, Garden State Association of Black Journalists and the New Jersey Society of Professional Journalists.