The Day

Climate change makes freak Siberian heat 600 times likelier

- By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer

Scientists found that without climate change the type of prolonged heat that hit Siberia would happen once in 80,000 years, “effectivel­y impossible without human influence,” said study lead author Andrew Ciavarella, a scientist at the UK Met Office.

Nearly impossible without man-made global warming, this year’s freak Siberian heat wave is producing climate change’s most flagrant footprint of extreme weather, a new flash study says.

Internatio­nal scientists released a study Wednesday that found the greenhouse effect multiplied the chance of the region’s prolonged heat by at least 600 times, and maybe tens of thousands of times. In the study, which has not yet gone through peer review, the team looked at Siberia from January to June, including a day that hit 100 degrees for a new Arctic record.

Scientists from the United Kingdom, Russia, France, Netherland­s, Germany and Switzerlan­d used 70 climate models running thousands of complex simulation­s comparing current conditions to a world without man-made warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas. They found that without climate change the type of prolonged heat that hit Siberia would happen once in 80,000 years, “effectivel­y impossible without human influence,” said study lead author Andrew Ciavarella, a scientist at the UK Met Office.

This study, coordinate­d by World Weather Attributio­n, was done in two weeks and hasn’t yet been put through the microscope of peer review and published in a major scientific journal. But the researcher­s who specialize in these real-time studies to search for fingerprin­ts of climate change in extreme events usually do get their work later published in a peer-reviewed journal and use methods that outside scientists say are standard and proven. World Weather Attributio­n’s past work has found some weather extremes were not triggered by climate change.

But 2020’s Siberian heat wave stood out among the many studied, said attributio­n team co-lead Friederike Otto, acting director of Oxford University’s Environmen­tal Change Institute.

“Definitely from everything we have done it’s the strongest signal that we have seen,’’ Otto said.

The team looked at both the average temperatur­e in Siberia over the first six months of the year when temperatur­es averaged 9 degrees (5 degrees Celsius) above normal and the heat spike of 100 degrees occurred in the Russian town of Verkhoyans­k in June. Both just really couldn’t happen in a world without the additional heat-trapping gases from burning fossil fuel, Ciavarella said.

The scientists said the heat added to problems with widespread wildfires fires, pest outbreaks and the thawing of permafrost which led to a massive pipeline oil spill. Thawing permafrost also has the potential to release huge amounts of greenhouse gases trapped under the frozen ground, which could then worsen the warming, scientists said.

“This event is really worrying,” said study co-author Olga Zolina, a climate scientist at the P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in Moscow.

At least 10 outside scientists contacted by The Associated Press said this study was scientific­ally sound, using establishe­d and proper techniques.

“They have, in an impressive­ly short time, marshaled a lot of different datasets together which really give credence to their results,” said Danish Meteorolog­ical Institute climate scientist Ruth Mottram, who wasn’t part of the research.

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