• Make a contribution
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Thursday, January 1, 2026
  • Login
Reading Today Online
  • HOME
  • YOUR AREA
    • All
    • Caversham
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Katesgrove
    • Reading
    • Southcote & Coley
    • Tilehurst & Norcot
    • Whitley

    Students – don’t let thieves steal your personal and financial information

    MBE for Orthoptics whose work has changed the way ophthalmologists view children’s sight

    Reading sports bar and club set for comeback after stabbing incident

    The biggest developments that were approved in Reading in 2025

    Disabled man accuses Reading council of cutting off support payments

    What did the Normans ever do for us? Find out at Reading Museum

    Skaters join Reading Bike Hub: where ideas roll into reality

    ‘Heavy heart’ as Reading LGBTQ+ pub announces closure

    Reading garden room firm raises £745 for children’s charity with Christmas grotto

  • COMMUNITY
  • CRIME
  • READING FC
  • SPORT
    • All
    • Basketball
    • Football
    • Rugby

    “Any away point is very positive’: Reading FC manager Richardson reacts to draw

    Reading FC end year with away point to extend unbeaten run

    ‘We controlled the game brilliantly’: Richardson reacts to Reading FC’s away win

    Ex-Reading FC striker Andy Carroll to appear in court over alleged order breach

    Former Reading FC boss becomes favourite to take over at EFL club

    Reading FC’s top five most famous supporters

    Reading FC run riot at Home Park in Boxing Day victory

    Plymouth Argyle v Reading preview: Star strikers to feature in League One Boxing Day clash

    Reading FC loanee returns to parent club as loan is cancelled

  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING FESTIVAL
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • BUSINESS
  • MORE…
    • ADVERTISE
    • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
Reading Today Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment Arts

Climate change is turning up the heat

Phil Creighton by Phil Creighton
Monday, August 30, 2021 4:07 am
in Arts, Business, Featured, Lifestyle, Reading, Sport, Wokingham, Woodley
A A
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
David Lamont
David Lamont

Plastic Free Home with David Lamont

I recently read a BBC News article with the headline: ‘Met Office Issues First UK Extreme Heat Warning’.

For a moment, it felt a little like one of those turning points in a Hollywood disaster movie, shortly before everything hits the fan.

Unfortunately, that is a feeling I’ve been having more and more often when listening to or reading the news in recent years.

And like the typically aloof, widely discredited, most likely divorced, yet brilliant protagonist in such films, too often it feels like the powers that be aren’t listening or taking action.

Launched only last month, at the time the Met Office said of its new warning system: “The impacts of extreme heat can be many and varied. It can have health consequences, especially for those who are particularly vulnerable, and it can impact infrastructure, including transport and energy, as well as the wider business community.”

The press release went on to highlight how the UK State of the Climate report, published in 2019, showed that “warm spells” have more than doubled in length from 5.3 days in 1961-90 to over 13 days in 2008-2017.

Related posts

Students – don’t let thieves steal your personal and financial information

MBE for Orthoptics whose work has changed the way ophthalmologists view children’s sight

Reading sports bar and club set for comeback after stabbing incident

The biggest developments that were approved in Reading in 2025

Extreme summer temperatures, as witnessed in 2018, are now thirty times more likely than during pre-industrial times.

The report’s suggestion that such temperatures could become normal by the 2050s feels optimistic given what we have seen in the two summers since the report’s release.

Its lead author, The Met Office’s Mike Kendon, explained: “A lot of people think climate change is in the future – but this proves the climate is already changing here in the UK. As it continues to warm we are going to see more and more extreme weather such as heatwaves and floods.”

BBC Newsreader Sophie Raworth recently sprinkled some more bad news on top, as I was sipping my customary 10 o’clock cup of tea, announcing that this July had been the third warmest, fifth wettest and eighth sunniest on record and that no other year appeared in the top 10 for all three measures.

It is therefore desperately frustrating when you see our own Prime Minister flying from London to Cornwall for a G7 summit, or learn that our country’s climate minister, Alok Sharma, has travelled to more than 30 countries in just seven months.

I’ve achieved perhaps one-third of that in four decades.

Worldwide, the picture is no better. In fact, it’s often worse – as evidenced by the growing devastation caused by extreme weather events in countries ranging from Australia and China to Bangladesh and the US, not to mention across Europe.

Globally, 2020 concluded the Earth’s warmest decade on record, while the 10 hottest years have all occurred since 2005.

This year is predicted to take one of those top ten positions.

Two weeks ago, representatives of 195 governments met to review and discuss The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) most significant study and report since 2013.

Many experts in the field have expressed a hope that the report will serve as a “wake-up call” to world leaders.

Back in 2013, the IPCC stated that humans had been the “dominant cause” of global warming dating back to the 1950s.

The IPCC’s research played a pivotal role in countries signing the Paris Agreement in 2015 and has informed us all of the importance of limiting global warming to under 1.5°C versus pre-industrial levels.

This time around, the IPCC’s report will no doubt shape the agenda at the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, also known as COP26, set to take place in  Glasgow this November.

Let us hope that it is not an event, and more so an unmissable opportunity, that humanity looks back on and asks “what if?” in years to come.

Cross your fingers. In fact, cross everything you can.

Plastic Free Home logo

Created in 2018 by blogger and voluntary hack David Lamont, Plastic Free Home is an online community with over 32,000 followers that aims to seek and share ideas on how we can all live more sustainably.

Visit www.theplasticfreehome.com or www.facebook.com/plasticfreehomeuk

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Previous Post

READING FESTIVAL 2021: ‘Mindblowing’ to be back says Post Malone, Saturday round-up

Next Post

READING FESTIVAL 2021: Love is in the air during Sunday’s final day. Our great round-up

FOLLOW US

POPULAR STORIES

  • Former Reading FC boss becomes favourite to take over at EFL club

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading Buses rolling out new ticket machines across its services

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Eight men given football banning orders after violent disorder ahead of Reading FC v Oxford United match

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading FC sign young star on permanent move from Liverpool

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reading Football Club hit by winding-up petition from former chief executive

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

RDG.Today – which is a Social Enterprise – provides Reading Borough with free, independent news coverage.

If you are able, please support our work

Click Here to Support RDG.Today

ABOUT US

Reading Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Reading. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Reading Borough.

CONTACT US

news@wokinghampaper.co.uk

Reading Today Logo

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: editor@wokingham.today, or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Central Reading
    • East Reading
    • Bracknell
    • Calcot
    • Caversham
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
  • CRIME
  • COMMUNITY
  • SPORT
    • Reading FC
    • Football
    • Rugby
    • Basketball
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • ARTS
    • READING PRIDE
    • WOKINGHAM FESTIVAL
  • READING FESTIVAL
  • OBITUARIES
  • BUSINESS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT US
  • SUPPORT US
  • SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION

© 2021 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.