Current:Home > reviews2016’s Record Heat Not Possible Without Global Warming, Study Says -Wealth Evolution Experts
2016’s Record Heat Not Possible Without Global Warming, Study Says
View
Date:2025-04-12 21:43:57
The devastating heat wave that hit Asia in 2016 and the unprecedented warmth of ocean waters off of Alaska that year had something in common: neither would have been possible without the excess carbon dioxide that humans have pumped into the atmosphere over the past century, according to new research.
That year was the warmest on record globally, and that extreme also would have been impossible without climate change, the report said.
The findings marked an ominous first for the American Meteorological Society’s annual report on the role of climate change in extreme weather events, which was released Wednesday. While five previous editions included research showing that climate change made dozens of heat waves, droughts and storms more likely or more severe, none had determined that the events could not have occurred under “natural” conditions.
“The conversation needs to change,” Jeff Rosenfeld, editor-in-chief of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, said at a press conference Wednesday. “These are not just new odds. These are new weather extremes that are made possible by a new climate.”
The report included 27 peer-reviewed studies that examined extreme weather events around the globe in 2016. All but six found that climate change had played a role. El Niño, the periodic warming of Pacific waters, also contributed to extreme weather that year.
Overall, the studies found that human-caused warming had increased the risk of heat waves, heavy precipitation, frost, drought, marine heat, wildfires and coral bleaching across five continents, while making cold weather less likely in China. Among the events for which no climate link was found was a winter storm in the eastern U.S., a drought in Brazil and marine heat in the eastern Pacific.
The report, which was compiled and edited by scientists affiliated with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, several universities and the British government, says we are witnessing what climate models have long predicted: that eventually, greenhouse gas emissions from human activities would warm the planet enough to push extreme weather beyond the bounds of natural variability. The models suggested these events would come first in areas that are warming the fastest, including northern latitudes.
“It is striking how quickly we are now starting to see such results,” the editors wrote in the introduction.
One of the studies, by researchers at the University of Alaska, found that water temperatures in the Bering Sea last year were unprecedented, and that while natural variability contributed to the extreme, the heat “cannot be explained without anthropogenic climate warming.”
Another, by researchers in Japan, determined that the record-breaking heat wave that hit much of southern Asia last year “would never have happened without the anthropogenic warming.”
At the news conference, Andrew King, of the University of Melbourne in Australia and an author of two of the reports, said the studies are conservative with their conclusions. “So for scientists to say that an event would be virtually impossible without climate change,” he said, the odds of that conclusion being wrong are “very short.”
Finding Human Fingerprints in the Storms
The annual report includes studies that examine what role, if any, human-caused warming played in extreme weather.
The studies use a statistical approach, examining the chances that the event would occur given the current climate and atmospheric conditions. The researchers then use models to remove human-caused changes to see the likelihood under “natural” conditions before comparing the two.
In the case of 2016’s record global temperature, “when they tried to simulate this event without human-caused climate change, they couldn’t do it,” said Stephanie Herring, a climate scientist at NOAA and the lead editor of the report.
This year, several studies examined the impacts of extreme weather on species and ecosystems. One paper found that warmer ocean waters, heated in part by human-caused warming, contributed to coral bleaching and a drop in fish and seabird numbers in parts of the Pacific Ocean.
2017: Hurricane Harvey’s Extreme Rainfall
The American Meteorological Society report looked back to 2016 and did not examine the extreme events of this year, such as the record-breaking hurricane season, California’s devastating wildfires or the new low for Arctic sea ice.
In a separate study published Wednesday in the journal Environmental Research Letters, scientists affiliated with the group World Weather Attribution examined the record rainfall that Hurricane Harvey brought to Texas in August 2017. One station near Houston recorded more than 51 inches of rain. The scientists determined that human-caused climate change made Harvey’s extreme rainfall three times more likely and 15 percent more intense.
veryGood! (24677)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Stop lying to your children about death. Why you need to tell them the truth.
- Johnson says House will hold Mayorkas impeachment vote as soon as possible
- Exotic animals including South American ostrich and giant African snail seized from suburban NY home
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- NASA retires Ingenuity, the little helicopter that made history on Mars
- Mali ends crucial peace deal with rebels, raising concerns about a possible escalation of violence
- Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, longtime Maryland Democrat, to retire from Congress
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Meet Noah Kahan, Grammy best new artist nominee who's 'mean because I grew up in New England'
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Jannik Sinner ends 10-time champion Novak Djokovic’s unbeaten streak in Australian Open semifinals
- Meet Noah Kahan, Grammy best new artist nominee who's 'mean because I grew up in New England'
- 3 people found dead inside house in Minneapolis suburb of Coon Rapids after 911 call
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Review: Austin Butler's WWII epic 'Masters of the Air' is way too slow off the runway
- Jimmy Buffett Day: Florida 'Margaritaville' license plate, memorial highway announced
- Houthis, defying U.S. strikes, attempt another attack on U.S.-owned commercial ship
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Can't find a dupe? Making your own Anthropologie mirror is easy and cheap with these steps
Lenny Kravitz to Receive the Music Icon Award at 2024 People's Choice Awards
Megan Thee Stallion, Nicki Minaj feud escalates with 'get up on your good foot' lyric
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Kim Kardashian Reveals If Her Kids Will Take Over Her Beauty Empire
NASA retires Ingenuity, the little helicopter that made history on Mars
Mali ends crucial peace deal with rebels, raising concerns about a possible escalation of violence