Heat Waves caused by pace of warming
Heatwaves that obliterate temperature records as in western Canada last month and Siberia last year are caused by the rapid pace, rather than the amount, of global warming, researchers said Monday.
The findings, reported in Nature Climate Change, suggest that humanity is likely to see a lot more deadly scorchers in the coming decades. "Because we are in a period of very rapid warming, we need to prepare for more heat events that shatter previous records by large margins," head author Erich Fischer, a senior scientist at ETH Zurich and a lead author of the UN climate science assessment currently under review, told AFP.
The heatwave that ravaged British Columbia saw temperatures hit 49.6 degrees Celsius (121 Fahrenheit), more than five degrees above the hottest day recorded in Canada up to that point.
Current rates of warming -- about 0.2 degrees Celsius per decades -- are likely to continue for at least another 10 to 20 years no matter how quickly humanity reduces the carbon pollution that drives global heating, the study warns.
But efforts to curb greenhouse gases over the next decade will pay off later. "The future probability of record-shattering extremes depends on the emissions pathway that gets us to a given level of warming," Fischer said.
Up to now, research on how global warming will affect heatwaves has focused mostly on how much temperatures have risen compared to some reference period rather than on how quickly.
That is, of course, critically important, and the science has shown without a doubt that a warmer world will produce more and hotter heatwaves. But not taking into account how quickly temperatures rise fails to capture a key part of the picture. "Without climate change, one would expect record temperatures to become rarer the longer we measure," Fischer explained.
Likewise, if average global temperatures stabilise -- at, say, 1.5 degrees Celsius above mid-19th century levels, the aspirational target of the Paris Agreement -- dramatic new records would progressively become less frequent. Fischer compares it to track and field, where the longer a discipline exists, the harder it is top a world record. The long and high jump records, for example, have stood for decades, or are only ever surpassed by a centimetre or two.
But if athletes start taking performance-enhancing drugs, as happened in US baseball during the late 1990s, records are suddenly broken often and by a lot. "The climate currently behaves like an athlete on steroids," Fischer said.
At current rates of greenhouse gas emissions, the world is on track to continue warming at current rates to more than 3C by 2100. "This is a very important study," commented Tim Palmer, a research professor at the University of Oxford who was not involved in the findings.
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