Showing posts with label prolonged heat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prolonged heat. Show all posts

31 July, 2018

Droughts, Heat Waves and Floods: How to Tell When Climate Change Is to Blame

The Northern Hemisphere is sweating through another unusually hot summer. Japan has declared its record temperatures a natural disaster. Europe is baking under prolonged heat, with destructive wildfires in Greece and, unusually, the Arctic. And drought-fuelled wildfires are spreading in the western United States.
The dried up bed of Yarrow Reservoir near Bolton, England,
 on July 23, 2018, during a weeks-long heatwave across the U.K.
For Friederike Otto, a climate modeller at the University of Oxford, UK, the past week has been a frenzy, as journalists clamoured for her views on climate change’s role in the summer heat. “It’s been mad,” she says. The usual scientific response is that severe heatwaves will become more frequent because of global warming. But Otto and her colleagues wanted to answer a more particular question: how had climate change influenced this specific heatwave? After three days’ work with computer models, they announced on 27 July that their preliminary analysis for northern Europe suggests that climate change made the heatwave more than twice as likely to occur in many places.


Read the Scientific American story by Quirin Schiermeier -  “Droughts, Heat Waves and Floods: How to Tell When Climate Change Is to Blame.”

26 November, 2017

Global hot spot: Exceptional heat pushes up ocean temperatures off Australia

Australia is home to a global hot spot for sea-surface temperatures, with a record burst of prolonged heat in the country's south-east helping to make conditions several degrees warmer than average.
Daily weather charts generated by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration show the unusual warmth is almost unmatched around the world, compared with normal temperatures.

Only patches off Greenland and New York in the US are as abnormally warm compared with long-run averages. (See chart below.)

"It's clear sea-surface temperatures around south-eastern Australia, and Tasmania in particular, are well above average," Blair Trewin, senior climatologist for the Bureau of Meteorology, told Fairfax Media.


Read Peter Hannam’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “Global hot spot: Exceptional heat pushes up ocean temperatures off Australia.”