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The most comprehensive climate report to date shows the United States is facing an immediate threat from climate change. The report released in November of 2018 warns that - if not addressed immediately - the changing climate could lead to the deaths of thousands of Americans and a massive disruption to the country's economy.Nevada is feeling the impacts of climate change intimately. Las Vegas and Reno are among the fastest-warming cities in the country. In fact, Climate Central says Las Vegas is the fastest-warming city, moving up almost 6 degrees on average since 1970.Heat is only part of the problem. Climate change is also impacting water resources, wildlife, and wildfire risks.Desert Companion and State of Nevada have made a commitment to cover the urgent issue of climate change in an informal partnership with other media outlets around the world.Throughout the year, we will be reporting on the impacts of climate change on the state, the solutions being offered to address the problem and adaptations that are already underway.

Too Hot

Norwegian Air

This month, Norwegian Air Shuttle will resume its seasonal service between Las Vegas and four European cities. The airline suspended the flights in March because excessive heat had caused it to regularly delay flights out of McCarran International Airport the previous summer. Norwegian Air wasn’t alone. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported in August that dozens of flights from Vegas were delayed or cancelled during this summer’s record-breaking heat.

Why does heat cause flights to be cancelled? No, it’s not because the tarmac is melting. It has to do with plane weight and air density. “As air temperatures rise at constant pressure, air density declines, resulting in less lift generation by an aircraft wing at a given airspeed, and potentially imposing a weight restriction on departing aircraft,” wrote the team of researchers behind the article “The impacts of rising temperatures on aircraft takeoff performance” in the September issue of the journal Climatic Change.

The solutions? Lighter loads, longer runways (to build greater speed), or more departures during cooler hours. The latter solution was chosen by Hainan Airlines, which moved its two nonstop Las Vegas-Beijing flights from 2 p.m. to 1 a.m.

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Others may be forced to follow suit. The Climatic Change study predicts that, by the middle to end of this century, an average of 10-30 percent of annual flights departing at the hottest time of day will have to be lighter in order to take off .

Desert Companion welcomed Heidi Kyser as staff writer in January 2014. In 2024, Heidi was promoted to managing editor, charged with overseeing the Desert Companion and State of Nevada newsrooms.