The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Heat waves have grown longer, hotter, new study says

Scientists attribute temperatur­e trend with more dangerous heat domes to climate change.

- By Seth Borenstein

Climate change is making giant heat waves crawl slower across the globe and they are baking more people for a longer time with higher temperatur­es over larger areas, a new study finds.

Since 1979, global heat waves are moving 20% more slowly — meaning more people stay hot longer — and they are happening 67% more often, according to a study in Science Advances. The study found the highest temperatur­es in the heat waves are warmer than 40 years ago and the area under a heat dome is larger.

Studies have shown heat waves worsening before, but this one is more comprehens­ive and concentrat­es heavily on not just temperatur­e and area, but how long the high heat lasts and how it travels across continents, said study co-authors and climate scientists Wei Zhang of Utah State University and Gabriel Lau of Princeton University.

From 1979 to 1983, global heat waves would last eight days on average, but by 2016 to 2020 that was up to 12 days, the study said.

Eurasia was especially hit harder with longer lasting heat waves, the study said. Heat waves slowed down most in Africa, while North America and Australia saw the biggest increases in overall magnitude, which measures temperatur­e and area, according to the study.

“This paper sends a clear warning that climate change makes heat waves yet more dangerous in more ways than one,” said Lawrence Berkeley National Lab climate scientist Michael Wehner, who wasn’t part of the research.

Just like in an oven, the longer the heat lasts, the more something cooks. In this case it’s people, the co-authors said.

“Those heat waves are traveling slower and so slower so that basically means that ... there’s a heat wave sitting there and those heat waves could stay longer in the region,” Zhang said. “And the adverse impacts on our human society would be huge and increasing over the years.”

The team conducted computer simulation­s showing this change was due to heat-trapping emissions that come from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas. The study found climate change’s fingerprin­t by simulating a world without greenhouse gas emissions and concluding it could not produce the worsening heat waves observed in the last 45 years.

The study also looks at the changes in weather patterns that propagate heat waves.

Atmospheri­c waves that move weather systems along, such as the jet stream, are weakening, so they are not moving heat waves along as quickly — west to east in most but not all continents, Zhang said.

Several outside scientists praised the big picture way Zhang and colleagues examined heat waves, showing the interactio­n with weather patterns and their global movement and especially how they are slowing down.

This shows “how heat waves evolve in three dimensions and move regionally and across continents rather than looking at temperatur­es at individual locations,” said Kathy Jacobs, a University of Arizona climate scientist who wasn’t part of the study.

“One of the most direct consequenc­es of global warming is increasing heat waves,” said Woodwell Climate Research Center scientist Jennifer Francis, who wasn’t part of the study.

“These results put a large exclamatio­n point on that fact.”

 ?? AP 2023 ?? GREECE: Tourists visit the ancient Acropolis hill during a heat wave in Athens. Since 1979, global heat waves are moving 20% more slowly — meaning more people stay hot longer — and they are happening 67% more often, according to a study in Science Advances.
AP 2023 GREECE: Tourists visit the ancient Acropolis hill during a heat wave in Athens. Since 1979, global heat waves are moving 20% more slowly — meaning more people stay hot longer — and they are happening 67% more often, according to a study in Science Advances.
 ?? AP 2023 ?? SPAIN: A girl drinks water from a fountain in Madrid. As in an oven, the longer heat lasts, the more something heats — people included.
AP 2023 SPAIN: A girl drinks water from a fountain in Madrid. As in an oven, the longer heat lasts, the more something heats — people included.
 ?? AP 2023 ?? CHINA: A security guard suffering from the heat wears an electric fan on his neck as he wipes away his sweat on a hot July day in Beijing.
AP 2023 CHINA: A security guard suffering from the heat wears an electric fan on his neck as he wipes away his sweat on a hot July day in Beijing.

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