Berliner Boersenzeitung - Every heatwave enhanced by climate change: experts

EUR -
AED 3.860389
AFN 70.9405
ALL 98.428265
AMD 423.097869
ANG 1.895549
AOA 960.638842
ARS 1063.8968
AUD 1.635723
AWG 1.891848
AZN 1.784418
BAM 1.958104
BBD 2.123599
BDT 125.679085
BGN 1.956006
BHD 0.396221
BIF 3042.722489
BMD 1.051027
BND 1.415951
BOB 7.267552
BRL 6.349672
BSD 1.051738
BTN 89.135736
BWP 14.368044
BYN 3.441426
BYR 20600.124622
BZD 2.119995
CAD 1.479583
CDF 3017.497698
CHF 0.929254
CLF 0.037147
CLP 1024.993012
CNY 7.634665
CNH 7.648424
COP 4653.421008
CRC 533.933371
CUC 1.051027
CUP 27.852209
CVE 110.620341
CZK 25.172299
DJF 186.788303
DKK 7.457976
DOP 63.534673
DZD 140.607411
EGP 52.344393
ERN 15.765401
ETB 131.378207
FJD 2.420147
FKP 0.829593
GBP 0.827782
GEL 2.985058
GGP 0.829593
GHS 15.775752
GIP 0.829593
GMD 75.153984
GNF 9059.850851
GTQ 8.118631
GYD 220.038925
HKD 8.18136
HNL 26.538394
HRK 7.497246
HTG 137.803468
HUF 413.526505
IDR 16729.718555
ILS 3.799467
IMP 0.829593
INR 89.064376
IQD 1376.845064
IRR 44235.091713
ISK 145.50395
JEP 0.829593
JMD 165.560332
JOD 0.745285
JPY 158.09492
KES 136.100855
KGS 91.225639
KHR 4235.637952
KMF 492.143287
KPW 945.923691
KRW 1486.404298
KWD 0.323264
KYD 0.87644
KZT 552.645568
LAK 23056.89786
LBP 94119.446915
LKR 305.429406
LRD 188.134025
LSL 19.076359
LTL 3.103409
LVL 0.635756
LYD 5.139327
MAD 10.45903
MDL 19.257844
MGA 4929.315688
MKD 61.506962
MMK 3413.693939
MNT 3571.388896
MOP 8.433324
MRU 41.930687
MUR 49.050924
MVR 16.207857
MWK 1826.684593
MXN 21.348613
MYR 4.669187
MZN 67.161871
NAD 19.075979
NGN 1711.134335
NIO 38.625422
NOK 11.626432
NPR 142.617178
NZD 1.795231
OMR 0.404636
PAB 1.051738
PEN 3.929761
PGK 4.244027
PHP 61.201133
PKR 291.978258
PLN 4.281187
PYG 8205.655777
QAR 3.826631
RON 4.972726
RSD 116.971941
RUB 110.355761
RWF 1455.672072
SAR 3.949268
SBD 8.796589
SCR 15.806854
SDG 632.190392
SEK 11.485514
SGD 1.412564
SHP 0.829593
SLE 24.016226
SLL 22039.510757
SOS 600.656819
SRD 37.211575
STD 21754.132051
SVC 9.202829
SYP 2640.736133
SZL 19.076038
THB 36.018645
TJS 11.479708
TMT 3.689104
TND 3.325422
TOP 2.461612
TRY 36.529082
TTD 7.134463
TWD 33.991781
TZS 2764.200598
UAH 43.8011
UGX 3870.554567
USD 1.051027
UYU 45.413439
UZS 13489.928782
VES 50.510377
VND 26706.590135
VUV 124.78001
WST 2.934037
XAF 656.736044
XAG 0.033557
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.840453
XDR 0.799819
XOF 654.789583
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.172954
ZAR 19.110715
ZMK 9460.501641
ZMW 28.475508
ZWL 338.43019
  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    61

    -1.64%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    13.63

    +0.81%

  • BCC

    0.4700

    146.9

    +0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    7.55

    +1.46%

  • RIO

    -0.1200

    63.39

    -0.19%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    26.84

    -1.75%

  • RELX

    0.4900

    47.97

    +1.02%

  • AZN

    -1.2700

    66.78

    -1.9%

  • GSK

    -0.5000

    34.4

    -1.45%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    24.56

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.8000

    62.17

    -1.29%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    13.42

    -0.89%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.76

    -0.8%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    24.35

    +0.16%

  • BP

    -0.3200

    29.13

    -1.1%

  • BTI

    0.1600

    37.19

    +0.43%

Every heatwave enhanced by climate change: experts
Every heatwave enhanced by climate change: experts / Photo: CRISTINA QUICLER - AFP/File

Every heatwave enhanced by climate change: experts

All heatwaves today bear the unmistakable and measurable fingerprint of global warming, top experts on quantifying the impact of climate change on extreme weather said Wednesday.

Text size:

Burning fossil fuels and destroying forests have released enough greenhouse gases into the atmosphere to also boost the frequency and intensity of many floods, droughts, wildfires and tropical storms, they detailed in a state-of-science report.

"There is no doubt that climate change is a huge game changer when it comes to extreme heat," Friederike Otto, a scientist at Imperial College London's Grantham Institute, told AFP.

Extreme hot spells such as the heatwave that gripped South Asia in March and April are already the most deadly of extreme events, she added.

"Every heatwave in the world is now made stronger and more likely to happen because of human-caused climate change," Otto and co-author Ben Clarke of the University of Oxford said in the report, presented as a briefing paper for the news media.

Evidence of global warming's impact on extreme weather has been mounting for decades, but only recently has it been possible to answer the most obvious of questions: To what extent was a particular event caused by climate change?

The most scientists could say before is that an unusually severe hurricane, flood or heatwave was consistent with general predictions of how global warming would eventually influence weather.

News media, meanwhile, sometimes left climate change out of the picture altogether or, at the other extreme, mistakenly attributed a weather disaster entirely to rising temperatures.

With more data and better tools, however, Otto and other pioneers of a field known as event attribution science have been able to calculate -- sometimes in near realtime -- how much more likely or intense a particular storm or hot spell has become due to global warming.

- Courtroom evidence -

Otto and colleagues in the World Weather Attribution (WWA) consortium, for example, concluded that the heatwave that gripped western North America last June -- sending temperatures in Canada to a record 49.6 C (121 F) -- would have been "virtually impossible" without human-induced climate change.

A heatwave that scorched India and Pakistan last month is still under review, Otto told AFP, but the larger picture is frighteningly clear.

"What we see right now in terms of extreme heat will be very normal, if not cool, in a 2-degree to 3-degree Celsius world," she said, referring to average global temperatures above preindustrial levels.

The world has warmed nearly 1.2C so far.

That increase made record-setting rainfall and flooding last July in Germany and Belgium that left more than 200 dead up to nine times more likely, the WWA found.

But global warming is not always to blame.

A two-year drought in southern Madagascar leading to near famine conditions attributed by the UN to climate change was in fact a product of natural variability in the weather, experts reported.

Quantifying the impact of global warming on extreme weather events using peer-reviewed methods has real-world policy implications.

Attribution studies, for example, have been used as evidence in landmark climate litigation in the United States, Australia and Europe.

In one case set to resume later this month, Saul Luciano Lliuya v. RWE AG, a Peruvian farmer is suing the German energy giant for the costs of preventing harmful flooding from a glacial lake destabilised by climate change.

A scientific assessment entered into evidence concluded that human-caused global warming is directly responsible for creating a "critical threat" of a devastating outburst, putting a city of some 120,000 people in the path of potential floodwaters.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)