Carina comments on the growing number of reports predicting a host of problems, from infrastructure deterioration to lake algae blooms, in MI if temperatures increase an average 2 degrees over the next 40 years.

“We were considering all natural cause mortalities, not just heat stroke in that estimate,” said Carina Gronlund, an environmental epidemiologist and author on the University of Michigan report. “It’s not necessarily emergency room visits with heat exhaustion or heatstroke on the [patient] record.”