New study finds household appliance tied to nearly 20,000 premature deaths: 'We should focus on solutions'

Researchers at Stanford University have revealed that gas stoves contribute to about 19,000 adult deaths each year in the U.S.

The Cool Down

Methane is an explosive gas. It's really stupid to pump this into your home or buildings.

#naturalgasexplosion
#naturalgasismethane

https://www.wkbn.com/news/local-news/gas-explosion-in-youngstown-ohio/

Gas explosion in downtown Youngstown, Ohio

Local News, Weather and Sports in Youngstown, Ohio

WKBN.com

If the earth survives someday we'll laugh at pumping explosives into our homes and schools

#NaturalGasIsMethane
#FuckFossilFuel

https://fox8.com/news/local-schools-dismissed-early-for-gas-odor/

Climate Town been putting out bangers for a while now. This one is no different. Heavy topic well covered, but somehow manage to make me almost spit my coffee all over the place laughing a couple of times.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2oL4SFwkkw

and the nebula version

https://nebula.tv/videos/climatetown-natural-gas-is-scamming-america-climate-town

#climateTown #naturalGasIsMethane

Natural Gas Is Scamming America | Climate Town

YouTube

“United States scientists documented the highest level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in millions of years, at the same time as record wildfires blazed through Canada, lacing the air from the Midwest to the East Coast in a blanket of smoke with enough disease-causing particles to make venturing outside unsafe for people with breathing problems.”
#ClimateCrisis #EndOil #EndPlastic #NaturalGasIsMethane

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/climate-canadian-wildfires_n_647f475be4b091b09c3518c6

U.S. Hits New Atmospheric Carbon Record, While Wildfires Blanket Continent In Smoke

Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are now more than 50% higher than the average before the industrial era.

HuffPost
Gas stoves could be banned in 2023, top federal official says

Citing studies that link gas stoves to health problems including asthma, a U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission official said his agency will begin a review.

The Seattle Times