China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Extreme weather to grow more intense, experts say

- By BO LEUNG in London boleung@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

A summer of intense heat and drought has led to wildfires across southern Europe and surroundin­g regions, with flames tearing through forests and destroying homes in such countries as Greece, Italy, Turkey and France.

Scorching temperatur­es in Sicily reportedly saw the mercury rise to a record 48.8 C, which, if confirmed by the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, will break the previous European record of 48 C in Athens in 1977.

Experts say the intense heat waves and fires are linked to climate change, and that extreme weather will only get worse in coming years.

“Our carbon emissions have caused global heating, and that has changed weather patterns, making these extremes more intense and more frequent,” said Deirdre McKay, professor of sustainabl­e developmen­t at Keele University in Staffordsh­ire, United Kingdom. “So in the Northern Hemisphere, in the summer, we are seeing these persistent heat domes, like the one that has been stuck over the northweste­rn United States and Canada. And now there’s a heat dome over Europe.”

Heat domes are areas of high pressure that stay over a large part of a region for days or even weeks, trapping very warm air underneath.

While August is normally hot and dry in the Mediterran­ean region, the temperatur­es this summer are extreme, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on.

McKay said, “The reason you get heat domes is ocean warming over the previous winter.” While heat domes are fairly common in temperate zones, they’re becoming more common and increasing­ly intense.

“The heat dome stuck over Greece, Italy and Turkey is now producing wildfires. That’s because the jet stream in the atmosphere shifts seasonally, and right now it’s dipped south across Western Europe,” McKay said. “That dip has created a ridge of high pressure over the southeast of Europe. Warm air moving up from the Sahara which is carrying dust has contribute­d to a big hot air mass that’s been parked over southeast Europe, making the temperatur­e 10 to 15 degrees hotter than average.”

The summer of 2021 has seen several severe heatwaves across the world. Some in parts of the Northern Hemisphere are unpreceden­ted, including in British Columbia, Canada, where temperatur­es reached 40.6 C.

Peter Stott, who leads the climate monitoring and attributio­n team at the Meteorolog­ical Office, which is the UK’s national weather service, predicted even higher temperatur­es ahead.

“The chances each summer of seeing really extreme temperatur­es are pretty high now,” Stott said. “We can’t say exactly when it is likely to happen, but Europe will need to prepare for the eventualit­y of further records being broken with temperatur­es above 50 C being possible in Europe in future, most likely close to the Mediterran­ean, where the influence of hot air from North Africa is strongest.”

The global temperatur­e is around 1.1 C higher than that of the preindustr­ial period, but some regions have seen their average temperatur­e increase by a greater amount.

Heavy rain, flooding

Climate change has also driven heavy rainfall and flooding, wreaking havoc in parts of Europe and elsewhere around the world.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said that climate change has made the occurrence of extreme rainfall up to nine times more likely.

More than 200 people died in floods in Belgium and Germany after extreme rainfall hit Western Europe in July. Over 90 millimeter­s of rain was recorded in a single day around the Ahr and Erft rivers in Germany.

“These floods have shown us that even developed countries are not safe from the severe impacts of extreme weather that we have seen and known to get worse with climate change,” said Friederike Otto, associate director of the Environmen­tal Change Institute at the University of Oxford. “This is an urgent global challenge and we need to step up to it. The science is clear and has been for years.”

McKay, the Keele University professor, said that extreme weather conditions and large areas of intensely human-modified landscapes have contribute­d to the flooding.

“You have more paving, and that means greater volumes of runoff in extreme rainfall events. That’s because there is just less exposed soil or vegetation to absorb the water. In some places, you have rain that’s falling on uplands which are already suffering from deforestat­ion.”

“The deforested areas may be growing new crops. The land cover is not the spongelike forest that we had 400 years ago, and people have been chipping away at the forest’s edges, too,” McKay said. “So you’ve got a lot of water coming down at once from a massive amount of rainfall and it can’t go where it usually would.”

 ?? BRAM JANSSEN / AP ?? Debris is stacked up on July 19 in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany, following deadly flooding caused by extremely heavy rainfall. The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on has said that due to climate change, the occurrence of extreme rainfall is up to nine times more likely.
BRAM JANSSEN / AP Debris is stacked up on July 19 in Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, Germany, following deadly flooding caused by extremely heavy rainfall. The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on has said that due to climate change, the occurrence of extreme rainfall is up to nine times more likely.

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