Starting next Tuesday, the Long Game’s format moves to weekly. We’ll still deliver data-driven storytelling, compelling interviews with industry and political leaders, and insight on the sustainability landscape on Tuesdays to keep you in the loop. If you want greater frequency, we’ve got you covered. Our Morning Sustainability newsletter, by POLITICO Pro, is delivered at 7 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and examines the latest politics and policy news in a broad range of sustainability topics. Learn more and get a free trial of our Pro offering. Jeff Goodell nearly collapsed on a summer day in 2019 when he walked 12 blocks in the heat of downtown Phoenix. The dizzying experience made enough of a mark that it inspired the longtime journalist to write about what is arguably the most insidious climate killer. "The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet," hit bookstores on July 11, which happened to be the 12th day of a streak of 110-plus-degree days that crippled Phoenix, the nation's 10th-largest metropolitan area. Goodell's book is the latest in a series of in-depth works he's done on climate change, following 2018's "The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World" and 2011's "How to Cool the Planet: Geoengineering and the Audacious Quest to Fix Earth's Climate." Daniel Cusick of POLITICO's E&E News recently caught up with Goodell, a Rolling Stone contributing editor and 2020 Guggenheim fellow, at his home in Austin, Texas, which was in the midst of its own streak of triple-digit temperature days. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. The nation's attention has focused on record-breaking heat in Arizona. But this isn't just about Phoenix, is it? No, and this moment is showing that. A few weeks ago, the heat story was about Texas and Florida. Now we face [simultaneous] extreme heat events around the world, from Italy to China. Phoenix is just an easy shorthand for talking about the implications of these kinds of events. Beyond near-heat exhaustion in Arizona, what prompted you to write about heat? I knew heat was fundamentally related to the warming of our planet. But I hadn't really thought about its immediate impacts, especially on people. Moreover, not long ago, I couldn't tell you what heat was. I could tell you that 77 degrees was cooler than 79 degrees. But if you asked me, "What is heat?" I couldn't have done it. So I started to look around for what else had been written about the effects of heat on people, and found this was a fertile, interesting subject to spend a few years writing about. Do you see some irony that heat is often the last climate change impact many think about, yet "global warming" and "climate warming" are the terms we use to refer to what's happening today? It is ironic, but it's not surprising, because heat is invisible, unlike hurricanes, where you see roofs being blown off houses and streets swamped with storm surges. Drought can also be very visible — like Lake Mead [in 2022] — and of course, wildfires are communicated easily. Yet I'm sitting in Austin looking out the window, and I couldn't tell you if the temperature is 70 degrees outside or 115.
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