A lineman tends to fallen power lines in the East End neighborhood of Houston, days after Hurricane Beryl made landfall, on Thursday, July 11, 2024 in Houston. | Raquel Natalicchio/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
The US has dealt with 60 percent more weather-related outages during warmer months over the past decade than it did during the 2000s, according to data crunched by the nonprofit research organization Climate Central.
It’s a trend that raises health risks as the planet heats up. Climate change supercharges disasters like storms and wildfires that often cut off power. Soaring demand for air conditioning also stresses out the grid. All this can leave people without life-saving cooling or electric medical devices at times when they’re most vulnerable.
Image: Climate Central
Climate Central collected data from the Department of Energy on outages that took place between 2000 and 2023. It looked specifically at periods…