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A man shields himself from the sun during a heatwave in Shanghai, China. Credit: Imaginechina Limited / Alamy Stock Photo. W93HRR
A man shields himself from the sun during a heatwave in Shanghai, China. 信贷:Imaginechina Limited / Alamy Stock Photo.
HEATWAVES
11 February 202016:00

Climate change driving surge in ‘day-night hot extremes’ in northern hemisphere

Daisy Dunne

02.11.20

Daisy Dunne

11.02.2020 | 4:00pm
Heatwaves Climate change driving surge in ‘day-night hot extremes’ in northern hemisphere

Deadly “day-night hot extremes” are increasing across the northern hemisphere due to climate change, a new study finds.

And the number of people exposed to such events, also known as “compound hot extremes”, is likely to increase “several-fold” as temperatures continue to climb in the coming decades, the study authors tell Carbon Brief.

If global temperatures reach 2C – the upper limit set by countries in theParis Agreement– the frequency of compound hot extremes could more than double across the northern hemisphere, when compared to 2012, the research finds.

However, if greenhouse gas emissions are not curbed, compound hot extremes could become eight times more frequent by the end of the century.

The study sets out “clear evidence” that human-caused climate change is leaving its mark on extreme heat events, another scientist tells Carbon Brief.

Day and night

The new study, published inNature Communications, looks specifically at “compound hot extremes” – a 24-hour period in summer where hot daytime temperatures are followed by similar nightime temperatures. (Temperatures are considered “hot” if they are in the top 10% of temperatures experienced by a region from 1960-2012.)

These kinds of events pose a particularly high danger to human health, explain study authorsDr Yang Chen, a climate extremes scientist from theChinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, andDr Jun Wang, a climate and meteorological scientist from theInstitute of Atmospheric Physicsin China. In a joint interview, they tell Carbon Brief:

“Simply put, compound hot extremes deprive humans of the valuable chance of relief, which could have been provided by the ‘cooling-off’ effects of a nighttime low.”

Such conditions occurred during the2003 summer heatwavein Europe, which saw70,000 deathsacross 16 countries, the authors say. Another example is the1995 Chicago heatwave,导致铁道部e than 700 heat-related deaths in just five days.

这项研究首次提出“一个完整的yline on compound hot extremes” – investigating how they have changed, the role of climate change in this and how they might increase in the future, the authors say.

The results show that compound hot extremes “are significantly increasing and will continue to increase in frequency and intensity” across the northern hemisphere, say Chen and Wang:

“These increases in heat hazards will translate into several-fold increases in population exposure to them. The rise of anthropogenic emission of greenhouse gas emissions is to blame for these increases.”

Burning up

For the first part of their study, the authors analysed the “fingerprint” of human-caused climate change on compound hot extremes to date. To do this, they conducted an “attribution” analysis.

This involves usingclimate modelsto produce two sets of simulations: one includingall the factors that affect the climate, including human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, volcanic eruptions and solar variability, and one including all of these factors except for greenhouse gas emissions.

The researchers then compared the frequency and intensity of compound hot extremes in both of these scenarios.

They found that only the scenario including human-caused greenhouse gas emissions could closely reproduce the pattern of compound hot extremes observed from 1960 to 2012. In their research paper, the authors write:

“We find that the summer-mean warming over 1960-2012 largely dictates the past increases in frequency and intensity of compound hot extremes during that period in both observations and simulations.”

The maps below show observed changes in summertime compound hot extreme frequency (left) and intensity (right) across the northern hemisphere from 1960-2012.

The left-hand map shows changes in the number of compound hot extreme days per decade (yellow to red for increases; light to dark blue for decreases), while the right-hand map shows changes in the average temperature of compound hot extremes per decade (same colour scale).

观察到的变化在夏季复合热好多e frequency (left) and intensity (right) across the northern hemisphere from 1960-2012. The left-hand map shows changes in the number of compound hot extreme days per decade (yellow to red for increases; light to dark blue for decreases), while the right-hand map shows changes in the average temperature of compound hot extremes per decade (same colour scale). Source: Wang et al. (2020)
观察到的变化在夏季复合热好多e frequency (left) and intensity (right) across the northern hemisphere from 1960-2012. The left-hand map shows changes in the number of compound hot extreme days per decade (yellow to red for increases; light to dark blue for decreases), while the right-hand map shows changes in the average temperature of compound hot extremes per decade (same colour scale). Source: Wang et al. (2020)

The map shows that increases in the frequency and intensity of compound hot extremes are widespread across the northern hemisphere, with parts of continental Europe and China particularly affected.

(Gaps in the data prevented the researchers from analysing changes in the most southern parts of the northern hemisphere, the authors say in their research paper.)

While the global pattern of increases is best explained by human-caused global warming, it is possible that some regional differences may be explained by other factors, the authors say.

For example, the drying of soils could help to explain local variation of heat extremes, the authors say in their research paper.

This is because dry soils accumulate heat during the day and release it at night, Wang and Chen say, making night hot extremes and, therefore, compound hot extremes, more likely.

Furnace forecast

Glossary
RCP4.5:The RCPs (Representative Concentration Pathways) are scenarios of future concentrations of greenhouse gases and other forcings. RCP4.5 is a “stabilisation scenario” where policies are put in place so atmospheric CO2 concentration levels…Read More

The authors also used climate models to project possible future changes to compound hot extremes until 2100. They investigated two scenarios: one “intermediate mitigation” pathway with moderately high greenhouse gas emissions (“RCP4.5”) and one with very high greenhouse gas emissions (“RCP8.5”).

Within each emissions scenario, they also looked at the changes to compound hot extremes expected if the world reaches 1.5C and 2C of global warming, which are the temperature limits set by theParis Agreement.

Glossary
RCP8.5:The RCPs (Representative Concentration Pathways) are scenarios of future concentrations of greenhouse gases and other forcings. RCP8.5 is a “very high baseline” emission scenario brought about by rapid population growth, high energy…Read More

The charts below show the average expected change in the number of summertime compound hot extreme days (purple line), as well as independent hot days (blue line) and independent hot nights (turquoise line) across the northern hemisphere under RCP4.5 (top) and RCP8.5 (bottom) until 2100. (Compound extremes are where a hot day is followed by a hot night, whereas an “independent hot day” is when a hot day is not followed by a hot night.)

On the charts, red circles point out when the temperature limits of 1.5C and 2C will be breached in each scenario. The bottom chart also highlights when 4C could be breached. The various data points represent results from different climate models.

(It is worth noting that events are considered to be compound or independent. So, a 24-hour period where a hot day is followed by a hot night would be considered a compound extreme, but not an independent hot day or hot night.)

The average expected change in summertime compound hot extreme days (purple line), as well as independent hot days (blue line) and independent hot nights (turquoise line) across the northern hemisphere under moderately high emissions (RCP4.5; top) and very high emissions (RCP8.5; bottom) until 2100. Red circles point out when the temperature limits of 1.5C and 2C will be breached in each scenario. The bottom chart also highlights when 4C could be breached. The various data points represent results from different climate models. Source: Wang et al. (2020)

The results show that the average number of compound hot extreme days across the northern hemisphere in summer would more than double if temperatures reach 2C, when compared to 2012.

Keeping temperatures at 1.5C could see five fewer compound hot extreme days across the northern hemisphere, on average, when compared to 2C, the research adds.

If greenhouse gas emissions are extremely high (RCP8.5), the number of summertime compound hot extremes could increase eight-fold by 2100, when compared to 2012, the results show.

The charts also show that compound hot events are expected to increase at a much more rapid rate than independent hot day or hot night events.

This is chiefly becauseclimate change is knownto have a larger effect on nightime temperatures than daytime temperatures, the authors say.

Therefore, as the chances of hot nights become higher, the chances of compound hot events also increase – and, so, the chances of a hot day or night occurring independently decreases, explain Chen and Wang.

‘Clear evidence’

The findings reinforce “the urgency in reducing emission of greenhouse gases” for policymakers, say Chen and Wang:

“We should keep the point in mind that as the globe warms, future summers are increasingly dominated by compound hot extremes and become more uncomfortable. Namely, a hot day accompanied by a hot night without a relief window for humans might become a ‘new norm’. As a result, vigilance against excess heat should be kept through day and night.”

The study is “impressively comprehensive”, saysDr Eunice Lo, a research associate in climate extremes from theUniversity of Bristol, who was not involved in the research. She tells Carbon Brief:

“I think the main take home message from this study is that we should use consecutive day-night hot extremes as a major heat-health indicator for policymaking, as compound hot extremes are projected to have larger future increases in frequency and intensity then hot days or nights.”

The findings produce “clear evidence” that human-caused climate change is leaving its mark on extreme heat events, saysProf Peter Stott, who leads on climate monitoring and attribution at theMet Office Hadley Centre. Stott, who was also not involved in the research, tells Carbon Brief:

“I don’t find the conclusions of the study very surprising, but I do like the way the authors have comprehensively set out the implications – the clear evidence that the changes to date are driven by human emissions and the clear evidence that future changes will result in significant increases in the frequency and intensity of these compound extremes worldwide.”

Wang et al. (2020) Anthropogenically-driven increases in the risks of summertime compound hot extremes, Nature Communications,https://nature.com/articles/s41467-019-14233-8

Sharelines from this story
  • Climate change driving surge in ‘day-night hot extremes’ in northern hemisphere
  • Northern hemisphere seeing surge in ‘day-night hot extremes’ with climate change

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