
Credit: Wisconsin Dept. of Health Services
We expect summers to be hot. But dangerous temperatures are an entirely different beast.
Every year, approximately 1,300 Americans die from exposure to extreme heat, which is the country’s #1 weather-related cause of death. Dangerous temperatures kill more people than hurricanes, floods, and tornadoes combined. And unfortunately, Wisconsin’s problem is about to get even worse.
Here in the Badger State, temperatures have increased by about 3 degrees since 1950, according to the latest report from the Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change, and are expected to warm by another two to eight degrees by 2050.
🗺️ MAP: How Much of the US Will Be Under ‘Extreme Heat’ By the 2050s
But what’s most concerning is this: The number of days hotter than 90 degrees is likely to triple by 2050, with southern cities like Milwaukee and Madison seeing three times as many days with a heat index above 105 by 2050. When temperatures reach that high, your vital organs can shut down without much warning.
One more alarming stat: The state as a whole is expected to see four times as many summer nights where the temperature doesn’t drop below 70 degrees. Right now, Milwaukee is the only Wisconsin city where that happens.
🥵 So what can we do? There are a number of small changes we can all make to reduce the impact we’re having on overall global warming, the root of Wisconsin’s changing climate. Scientists say these ten have the biggest impact.
Besides those, more immediately, it’s important for anyone who can to help people who don’t have a place to stay on Wisconsin’s hottest days. Groups like The Eras Senior Network in Milwaukee and Waukesha buy and install air conditioning units for seniors who can’t afford them (seniors are at highest risk for heat stroke.) Click here to learn more.
Finally, Wisconsin’s already-overwhelmed shelters continue to need help.
👉🏽 LIST: 12 Places in Wisconsin to Donate Clothes, Shoes, & More (that aren’t Goodwill)
Support Our Cause
Thank you for taking the time to read our work. Before you go, we hope you'll consider supporting our values-driven journalism, which has always strived to make clear what's really at stake for Wisconsinites and our future.
Since day one, our goal here at UpNorthNews has always been to empower people across the state with fact-based news and information. We believe that when people are armed with knowledge about what's happening in their local, state, and federal governments—including who is working on their behalf and who is actively trying to block efforts aimed at improving the daily lives of Wisconsin families—they will be inspired to become civically engaged.


Here’s how to lower your home’s energy bill under the Inflation Reduction Act
It begins with assessing your home’s current energy use, planning improvements, then getting connected to the credits and rebates that can create...

Wisconsinites need to know how they can benefit from Biden’s clean energy efforts. Mandela Barnes is on it.
The one-time head of the governor’s climate change task force now helps connect Wisconsinites to historic levels of funding for energy efficiency...

How to apply for a job in the American Climate Corps
The Biden administration announced its plans to expand its New Deal-style American Climate Corps (ACC) green jobs training program last week. ...

Biden marks Earth Day by announcing $7 billion in solar grants
The Biden administration on Monday announced the recipients of its Solar For All Program, a $7 billion climate program that aims to lower energy...