FORECAST Climate Change Impacts on Texas Water April 2830, 2008 Texas State Capitol Extension Austin-2025

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The city with the lowest overall risk is Laredo. For heat, El Paso has the lowest risk and San Antonio has the highest risk. For precipitation, El Paso has the lowest risk and Houston has the highest risk. For drought, Amarillo has the lowest risk and San Antonio has the highest risk.
States most affected by climate change include California, Florida, and the Carolinas with states across the west coast and southeast region remaining the most vulnerable to natural disasters induced by climate change.
HOTTER DAYS AHEAD Projections show a dramatic rise in extreme heat, with 100-degree days close to four times as common by 2036 as they were in the 1970s and 1980s. The expected average temperature in 2036 will be about 3 degrees warmer than the average over the last half of the last century.
Climate change is already impacting Central Texas, affecting everyone in our community and everything in the natural and built environment. For Austin, some of the impacts of climate change include: Higher temperatures and more heatwaves. Extended droughts and higher risk of wildfire.
With Texas growing population, municipal water demand is expected to surpass agricultural use by 2060, increasing 63 percent by 2070, ing to the State Water Plan. Water is also used to a lesser extent for manufacturing, power generation and mining.
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