This is the Theme of the Week edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a digest of our top commentary published every Sunday. Follow us on Instag [Bloomberg](
This is the Theme of the Week edition of [Bloomberg Opinion Today](, a digest of our top commentary published every Sunday. Follow us on [Instagram](, [TikTok](, [Twitter](, [Threads]( and [FacebookÂ](. Way back in 2013, this fledgling publicationâs editorial board warned us that a failure to curb man-made carbon emissions â which definitely lead to climate change, people â would mean [higher temperatures]( and a lot more violence. In the ensuing 10 years, overall temperatures have indeed continued to rise. This month is going down as [Earthâs hottest on record](, and there is no relief in sight, whether immediate or in our future. If youâre in the Northern Hemisphere right now, maybe that explains why your neighbors â and [pets]( â are crankier than usual. And if you work in a major urban area like [New York City]( â¦Â well, maybe try some meditation before you catch your [morning train](. âConcrete surfaces absorb and re-emit heat, which, with little shade and limited air circulation, makes high temperatures even higherâ in parts of the city, Bloombergâs Azul Cibils Blaquier explains. On the other side of the US, Phoenix has been suffocating under an unrelenting â[heat dome](â that has shattered records and [killed dozens]( of people. Arizona is, of course, already hot â and that hasnât been a deterrent for those flocking to one of the [fastest-growing areas]( in the country. âHumans are amazingly adaptable, [but there are limits](,â warns Mark Gongloff. Escaping into our homes and cranking the AC just exacerbates the very problem we have both created and cannot escape from. (As F.D. Flam points out to those of us looking to stay cool without killing the planet, we can [turn on a fan]( â and still get relief.) But we arenât watching our consumption in other areas, either. âIn this age of [climate crisis](, the world is consuming more crude than ever,â writes Javier Blas. âCurrently thereâs no chance that the world will reduce oil consumption by 2030 nearly as much as needed to meet its net-zero emissions targets. And thatâs why many Western governments, while preaching green in public, in private tell oil executives to keep investing in more production.â That is simply an untenable stance, one that will continue to cost the earth in unfathomable ways. âFor millions of people across the world, the heat has become impossible to ignore,â Bloombergâs editorial board [reminds us](. âItâs time policymakers come to the same conclusion.â Saving the planet will save lives â¦Â and maybe itâll make us a lot less angry, too. More Climate Reading: - [How Offshore Wind Can Survive Its Spell in the Doldrums]( â David Fickling
- [John Kerry's China Trip Was Not a Total Climate Loss]( â Matthew Yglesias
- [Indiaâs Food Security Is Being Choked by Climate Change]( â David Fickling
- [Climate Change Is Only Beginning to Mess Up Your Holidays]( â Lara Williams
- [Maine Is the New Florida for Climate Migrants]( â Conor Sen What to Watch Japan is still viewed by the west as a [Disney-like fantasy land](. Headlines like âsmile coaches,â âsexless couplesâ and âeyeball lickingâ only perpetuate the stereotype that it is a bizarre country. But âweird Japanâ stories are [nothing to smile about](, says Gearoid Reidy. For years, the news media was obsessed with the supposed unique problems of its aging population, sexless couples and the hikikomori youth who opted to stay at home playing video games instead of taking part in society. The latest trend, the Japanese âsmile coach,â is a milder form of this genre â itâs a real service, though one whose reach is exaggerated. Gearoid has lived in Japan for decades, and heâs sick of the way Western media portrays this complex, multifaceted society. Watch what he has to say in Bloomberg Opinionâs [Sunday Feature Video](. Follow Us You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Opinion Today newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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