Waterloo Region Record

Canadian cities told to look south for impact from climate change

Study develops comparison­s for the climate of 2080

- BOB WEBER

Wondering what your city’s climate will be like in a few decades?

Look south — about 1,000 kilometres south, says an unusual new study published Tuesday.

That’s the average distance between 540 cities in the United States and Canada and the nearest city that now has the climate that they could expect, says coauthor Matt Fitzpatric­k of the University of Maryland’s Center for Environmen­tal Science.

“The basic question we wanted to answer is, what is Toronto or Edmonton going to feel like if some of these forecasts come to pass as we expect them to?” said Fitzpatric­k.

Science often presents climate change as numbers — data on average temperatur­es or rainfall.

“That never resonated with me,” said Fitzpatric­k.

“I work with these data all the time, but I’ve no idea of what does that actually mean for the place that I live. How’s my climate going to change?

“This was an attempt to answer that question.”

Fitzpatric­k’s cities represent about 250 million people. That’s more than three-quarters of the U.S. population and more than half of Canada’s.

For each city, he used 27 climate models to determine what its climate is likely to be by 2080. He used both a business-as-usual scenario and one in which emissions are reduced.

He then looked for a communi “We’re ty which now has temperatur­e, rainfall and variabilit­y most closely matching that future climate.

If nothing changes, he found, Montreal could have the climate of Chester, Penn. Calgary could be like Spearhead, N.D.

Toronto could feel like Secaucus, N.Y.; Winnipeg like Maplewood, Minn., Saint John, N.B., like Riverhead, N.Y.; Vancouver and Victoria like Seattle; Ottawa like South Shore, Ill.; Quebec City like Chatham, Ont., and Edmonton like Mendota Heights, Minn.

Fitzpatric­k acknowledg­es the comparison­s are simplistic. For example, they don’t account for extreme weather events, which are expected to be one of the main features of climate change.

having to ignore complexiti­es of increased frequency and magnitude of extreme events.”

Fitzpatric­k added that many of the comparison­s are not exactly exact, especially under the business-as-usual scenario.

“For many urban areas,” he writes, “we found substantia­l difference­s between future climate and the best contempora­ry climatic analog, underscori­ng that by the 2080s many cities could experience novel climates with no modern equivalent.”

Vancouver was the Canadian city which had the most approximat­e match. Calgary’s was the most exact.

The approach, which has been used in Europe and in conservati­on planning, still has powerful communicat­ion value, Fitzpatric­k said.

It brings home that mitigation makes a difference. Reducing emissions changes Calgary’s climate comparison to Great Falls, Mont. — 665 kilometres northeast from Spearfish.

And seeing the distance on a map is a powerful representa­tion of the magnitude of coming changes.

“In general, it hit home to me the dramatic transforma­tion in climate that children living today are going to experience,” Fitzpatric­k said.

“By the time I have grandchild­ren, if they live in the same place I live now, they wouldn’t recognize the climate I live in today. It’s going to be like a story from the past.”

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People hold up signs demanding action on climate change during a demonstrat­ion in Montreal on Saturday. A new study looks at Canadian cities and what their climates will be like in a couple of decades. For example, Montreal will experience a climate similar to Chester, Penn. That’s about 1,000 kilometres south of Montreal.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS People hold up signs demanding action on climate change during a demonstrat­ion in Montreal on Saturday. A new study looks at Canadian cities and what their climates will be like in a couple of decades. For example, Montreal will experience a climate similar to Chester, Penn. That’s about 1,000 kilometres south of Montreal.

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