The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a strong warning that global warming will have “important implications for human health” in the coming decades. The warning came in a report released just days after the agency refused to regulate global warming caused by greenhouse gases as pollutants under the Clean Air Act.

“Today is a typical example of climate change on schizophrenia in the Bush administration,” said U.S. Rep. Edward J. Markey, chairman of the House Select Committee on energy independence and global warming. “On the one hand, government scientists are saying that global warming poses serious threats to our health and wellbeing, and on the other hand, [there is] the White House are” hacks “because of the politics of oil industry bidding to do nothing. ”

The EPA report warns that rising temperatures will worsen air quality in cities of the East, and more deaths among the elderly, poor and inhabitants of the city center during future heat waves .

“It will be hotter, but it will be hotter in the years before it was in the past,” said co-author Kristie Ebi. Young people now living near Washington, “[are] going to look back and think about how summer used to be nice,” he said. “Within 20, 30 years, on average, the [public] should be noted that it is warmer.”

Global warming is also likely to lead to more frequent and powerful hurricanes, declining water supplies in the West, the loss of coastal land to rising sea levels and storm surges, and more rapid spread of food and waterborne diseases.

According to former EPA deputy associate administrator, K. Jason Burnett, the president’s deputy chief of staff of the policy originally approved a decision by the EPA to regulate emissions of greenhouse gases as air pollutants, a move supported by several cabinet members and senior management. Before the decision could become official, however, the White House banned the action from the EPA.