Deadly extreme weather year for US as carbon emissions soar

FILE - People walk through the snow as they pass the Alamo, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021, in San Antonio, as ice and sub-freezing weather to wreak havoc on the state's power grid and utilities. According to three different reports released Monday, Jan. 10, 2021, the United States staggered through a steady onslaught of deadly billion-dollar climate disasters in an extra hot 2021, while the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions last year jumped 6% because of surges in coal and long-haul trucking, putting America further behind its 2030 climate change cutting goal. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

A child's toy car sits near damaged cars and homes Dec. 14, 2021, in Bowling Green, Ky., after a tornado touched down in the middle of the night. According to three different reports released Monday, Jan. 10, 2021, the United States staggered through a steady onslaught of deadly billion-dollar climate disasters in an extra hot 2021, while the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions last year jumped 6% because of surges in coal and long-haul trucking, putting America further behind its 2030 climate change cutting goal. (AP Photo/James Kenney, File)

The United States staggered through a steady onslaught of deadly billion-dollar weather and climate disasters in an extra hot 2021, while the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions last year jumped 6% because of surges in coal and long-haul trucking, putting America further behind its 2030 climate change cutting goal.