An extreme heat belt may be forming across the country as a result of the hot weather this summer.

Matthew Eby, CEO of the climate-risk research nonprofit First Street Foundation, told Insider that this will be one of the better summers of their lives.

The foundation used a peer reviewed model to assess six years of US government satellite data and predict future risk of extreme heat by property.

Scientists warn that extreme heat will become more common, more extreme, and longer- lasting in the future.

According to the report, 8 million Americans will face the possibility of being in at least 125 degrees for a day next year.

13 times more people would be added in 30 years according to the report.

The map below shows how much of the US land area is covered by that one third of the current population.

Two maps of the US showing possible extreme heat spots in 2023 and 2053.
Counties where at least one day is expected to breach 125 degrees Fahrenheit in 2023 (left) and 2053 (right). (First Street Foundation)

Most of the heat will be in the center of the country, from the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coast up through Chicago.

The report states that parts of the southwest and southeast are likely to have more than one day above 125 degrees.

The risk of heat stroke is high at high temperatures.

Infrastructure fails at high temperatures as well. Train tracks can bend and cause derailing and airports can melt. The power can go out sometimes.

More hot days and more heat waves

There are days that can reach 125 degrees. The temperature can be dangerous.

The report shows more days above 100 degrees in the south.

The extreme heat of the summer so far in 2020 is in line with many locations where the First Street Foundation expects the most heat in years to come.

Two maps of the US show the projected days of extreme heat in 2023 and 2053.
Circles represent days above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in 2023 (left) and 2053 (right). Darker colors indicate a greater number of days, while the sizes of the circles represent the number of properties impacted. (First Street Foundation)

The map below shows that the report projects more heat waves across the country, with increased risk in northern areas including the Pacific Northwest.

Two maps of the US show projected heat waves in 2023 and 2053.
The county-by-county probability of a heat wave – three consecutive days above the 98th percentile for the local area – in 2023 (left) and 2053 (right). (First Street Foundation)

The projections in this report are conservative because they assumed a future scenario where humans drastically cut greenhouse-gas emissions that are driving climate change.

If the world doesn't cut emissions soon, the future of extreme heat could be worse than the maps show.

In 30 years, our underrepresentation of these heat impacts will be noticed.

Warming is locked in by the gases we've added to the atmosphere.

Eby said that people and companies need to prepare for more extreme heat in the future.

The hope is that this data can inform everyone from the individual, to commercial users to state, local and federal governments, which are all users of our data.

You can check past data and current and future risks for individual properties on riskfactor.com.

The original article was published by Business Insider.

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