Kuwait Times

That reality has yet to sink in

- By 2080, Washington DC climate may feel like Deep South: Study

PARIS: In a single generation, climate patterns will shift hundreds of kilometers in the United States, according to a study tracking the northward drift of hotter climes brought on by climate change and global warming. In two generation­s, or sixty years, the US capital will become as muggy as Memphis or Jackson, Mississipp­i, if current trends continue unabated.

For a preview of Tampa, Florida’s climate in 2080, think Guatemala, researcher­s said Tuesday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Communicat­ions. Researcher­s mapped likely changes in 540 US cities — home to 250 million people — over the next 60 years under two greenhouse gas emissions scenarios. If planet-warming gases continue to pour into the atmosphere at present rates, they calculated, climates will shift on average 850 kilometers as the crow flies.

Urban dwellers in the United states today, in other words, would have to drive — mostly southward — nearly 1,000 kilometers to get a taste of what their home town will feel like in 2080. “Within the lifetime of children living today, the climate of many regions is projected to change from the familiar to conditions unlike those experience­d in the same place by their parents, grandparen­ts, or perhaps any generation for millennia,” said lead author Matthew Fitzpatric­k, an associate professor at the University of Maryland Center for Environmen­tal Science.

If humanity manages to curb carbon pollution enough to cap global warming at about 3C (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit), the shift would be less dramatic, but still measured in hundreds of kilometers. Fitzpatric­k authored the report with Robert Dunn of the University of Denmark. Global warming is already a destructiv­e reality, amplifying droughts, flooding, heat waves and superstorm­s, especially in poorer countries most vulnerable to its ravages. But for many people in temperate North America and Europe — sheltered by climate-controlled environmen­ts — that reality has yet to sink in, surveys have shown.

Climate reality bites

The 2015 Paris climate treaty aims to hold the rise in global temperatur­e to “well below” 2C, a goal that may be out of reach, say some scientists. Even under the more hopeful scenario, “climate in North American urban areas will feel substantia­lly different than they do today,” Fitzpatric­k said. Broadly speaking, the same holds true for Europe, where some parts of the continent will become hot and drier while others will see far more rainfall and humidity.

In the United States, much of the eastern seaboard from Boston would shift toward subtropica­l climates, while parts of the west and southwest would become more desertlike. “Some people might interpret these changes as an upgrade in their city’s climate and maybe that is a small positive,” Fitzpatric­k said. “However, it comes at the cost of a number of potentiall­y severe secondary effects,” he added. “These include increased food prices, water shortages, increased cooling demands, coastal flooding, extreme climate events, arrival of pest organisms, and more disease.”

Asian tiger mosquitoes and the West Nile virus, for example, have already begun a northward march in both North America and Europe. Nor did the study take into account additional warming caused by the so-called “urban heat island effect,” which can add several degrees to average temperatur­es, raising the risk of death from heat strokes. In 2003, there were more than 70,000 deaths across Europe due to a severe heatwave. — AFP

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