Bangkok Post

Heat wave ‘could repeat’

Scorching temperatur­es in Pacific Northwest blamed on climate change, writes Andrea Januta

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The suffocatin­g heat wave that killed hundreds of people across the Pacific Northwest last week would have been “virtually impossible” without climate change, a study has found.

Reporting the first research attributin­g the event to climate change on Wednesday, scientists said climate change had made such a heat wave in the region 150 times more likely. The scientists estimated the extraordin­ary temperatur­es were a one-ina-thousand-year event, though noted this was difficult to quantify given the unpreceden­ted heat in early summer. But if current greenhouse gas emissions continue, an event so extreme could start occurring every five to 10 years, they warned.

“People need to realise that heat waves are killers, and they are by far the deadliest extreme event,” said coauthor Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford and co-leader of the World Weather Attributio­n, an internatio­nal scientific collective that published the study. The research by 27 scientists is still awaiting peer review but uses peer-reviewed rapid attributio­n methods to produce findings quickly after extreme events.

“Heat waves are really changing so much more and so much faster than all other extreme events,” Prof Otto said. “Heat preparatio­n and preventing death during heat waves need to be a No.1 priority for every city authority.”

The heat wave gripped parts of the

United States and Canada for days at the end of June, smashing records in dozens of cities. Power lines melted in the heat. Roads buckled. Canada thrice broke its national temperatur­e record, peaking on June 29 at 49.6ºC — a full 4.6ºC higher than the previous record set in 1937.

Another heat wave is expected to hit parts of Canada and the United States later this week.

The death toll in Oregon alone has

topped 100, while British Columbia saw hundreds more deaths than usual. It will take months to calculate a full death toll, but scientists say these numbers will rise. Hospitals also saw jumps in the number of heat-related visits and emergency service calls. The new research attributin­g the heat wave to climate change is not surprising. Worldwide, climate change has made heat waves more common and more severe.

 ?? NYT ?? Long Loch and Derrickson Lake wildfires burn in British Columbia. The heat wave that scorched the Pacific Northwest last week would almost certainly not have occurred without global warming, a team of climate researcher­s said.
NYT Long Loch and Derrickson Lake wildfires burn in British Columbia. The heat wave that scorched the Pacific Northwest last week would almost certainly not have occurred without global warming, a team of climate researcher­s said.
 ?? REUTERS ?? People sleep at a cooling shelter set up during an unpreceden­ted heat wave in Portland, Oregon.
REUTERS People sleep at a cooling shelter set up during an unpreceden­ted heat wave in Portland, Oregon.

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