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RandySF

(58,835 posts)
Wed Mar 27, 2024, 04:41 AM Mar 27

In deep red Utah, climate concerns are now motivating candidates

Driving on Interstate 215 south of Salt Lake City, the bumper stickers on the pickup truck stood out. One featured a rattlesnake and the classic motto “Don’t tread on me,” which dates to the Revolutionary War but has been co-opted by many right-wing ideologues. And the other featured a map of a shrinking lake and the words “Keep the Salt Lake Great,” the motto of a local environmental group focused on protecting Utah’s rivers and ecosystems.

Those dual views perfectly capture the ethos of Utah, a deep red state whose natural beauty is being threatened by more intense heat waves and extreme drought. A proud coal- and oil-producing state, it’s led by conservative lawmakers, and recent national surveys show it’s one of the most Republican states in the country. Back in 2010, the Utah Legislature even passed a resolution that essentially wrote climate change denial into state policy by urging the EPA to “cease its carbon dioxide reduction policies, programs, and regulations until climate data and global warming science are substantiated.”

But since then, Utah has been impacted by climate change more than most states — over the last 50 years, temperatures in the state have risen at about twice the global average, and it has faced worsening drought, wildfires, flash floods and extreme heat waves. The impact has been devastating on the health and well-being of residents, with decreasing productivity of farms and higher rates of respiratory disease and asthma, along with other heat-related diseases.

And climate change has seriously damaged one of the state’s natural wonders — that map on the truck driver’s bumper sticker reveals how climate change has shrunk the Great Salt Lake’s footprint by half in the last decades due to the reduced flow of mountain streams that feed the lake and higher demand for freshwater for new development and agriculture.


https://utahnewsdispatch.com/2024/03/24/utah-climate-concerns-motivate-candidates/

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In deep red Utah, climate concerns are now motivating candidates (Original Post) RandySF Mar 27 OP
Well, that only took 40 years. Think. Again. Mar 27 #1
When it yields money or political power, Republicans will figure out how to be there . nt bucolic_frolic Mar 27 #2
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