Published On 24 Jul 202224 Jul 2022
Brutal heatwaves are gripping Europe and the United States and are forecast to dump searing heat on much of China into late August.
The searing heat is part of a global pattern of rising temperatures, attributed by scientists to human activity.
Hotter, more frequent heatwaves
- Climate change makes heatwaves hotter and more frequent. This is the case for most land regions, and has been confirmed by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
- Greenhouse gas emissions from human activities have heated the planet by about 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.16 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times.
- “Every heatwave that we are experiencing today has been made hotter and more frequent because of climate change,” said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London who also co-leads the World Weather Attribution research collaboration.
- A study in Nature journal this month found that heatwaves in Europe have increased three-to-four times faster than in other northern mid-latitudes such as the US.
- The authors linked this to changes in the jet stream – a fast west-to-east air current in the northern hemisphere.
Fingerprints of climate change
- To find out exactly how much climate change affected a specific heatwave, scientists conduct “attribution studies”.
- Since 2004, more than 400 such studies have been done on extreme weather events, including heat, floods and drought.
- This involves simulating the modern climate hundreds of times and comparing it to simulations of a climate without human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
- For example, scientists with World Weather Attribution determined that a record-breaking heatwave in Western Europe in June 2019 was 100 times more likely to occur now in France and the Netherlands than if humans had not changed the climate.