Longer and more destructive wildfire seasons. Extended stretches of 80-degree fall days. A 20-year drought. Shrinking water supplies. Coloradans are already seeing the effects of climate change in their communities and on beloved public lands. The 2024 presidential election — along with congressional and other races — will have implications for energy, federal lands and climate policies that will affect millions of people in Colorado and across the Rocky Mountain West. “The differences between the two candidates are pretty stark,” said Robert Duffy, a political science professor at Colorado State University who studies environmental policy, of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. Harris, the Democratic nominee, calls climate change an existential threat and helped pass a major funding package to address the issue; it has funneled millions of dollars to Colorado projects. Trump, who’s again the GOP nominee, has said it’s all a hoax — and is among Republicans who prioritize energy development and the extraction of natural resources over the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. RELATED: Where to find climate change on your ballot if that’s a top voting concern Climate change, the environment and natural resources as a category were among the top concerns identified in the Voter Voices survey conducted this year by 30 news outlets across the state, including The Denver Post. In Colorado, scientists say climate change will result in decreased river flows, which will impact farmers and cities as well as businesses’ ability to obtain the water they need.

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