Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Study on link between temp rise, climate crisis in the offing

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

CANDOLIM: Whether the extremely high temperatur­es seen in India in March and April this year can be directly attributed to human-induced climate change, and to what extent, would be revealed in a study in the next 1-2 weeks by the World Weather Attributio­n network, a global collaborat­ion of climate scientists.

The network is expected to provide clues on how the climate crisis could have led to such extreme weather in the subcontine­nt, scientists Sarah Kew of Koninklijk Nederlands Meteorolog­isch Institutea­nd Robert Vautard, director, Institute Pierre-Simon Laplace said at a workshop on heat stress on Saturday.

There is only a one in a hundred chance of such a heatwave spell occurring every year, they said, stressing that the event was rare because of the large area that was affected, the unusually long duration and the early onset in spring.

There were intense heatwave spells from March 11 to 19, March 27 to April 12, April 17 to 19, and April 26 to 30, according to the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD). March this year was declared as the hottest in 122 years since the weather bureau started maintainin­g records.

The network is studying the 2022 heatwave event because of its large-scale impacts, such as crop damage, forest fires, power shortage, coal crisis, large rain deficit, school closures, and record temperatur­es in many weather stations. They are using five climate models to delve into the reasons.

The scientist network had earlier analysed the record high temperatur­e of 51 degrees Celsius in Rajasthan in May 2016. By some accounts, it was the thirdhighe­st temperatur­e ever documented globally. It was a short duration event of around 3-4 days and was mostly localised, making it different from what was experience­d this year.

While not attributin­g the 2016event directly to the climate the network had said impacts of heatwaves are considerab­le and increasing due to increasing air pollution and humidity in the region. Although the 2022 heatwave was unusual, such events are occurring more often, Vautard said. The WWA team includes scientists from IIT Delhi, IIT Mumbai, Imperial College London, New Zealand Climate Change Research Institute, and others. the network is also consulting India’s weather office to analyse the 2022 heatwave event.

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