Human-caused climate change very likely increased the severity of
heat waves that plagued India, Pakistan, Europe, East Africa, East Asia,
and Australia in 2015 and helped make it the warmest year on record,
according to new research published today in a special edition of the
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.
The fifth edition of Explaining Extreme Events from a Climate Perspective
presents 25 peer-reviewed research papers that examine episodes of
extreme weather of 2015 over five continents and two oceans. It features
the research of 116 scientists from 18 countries analyzing both
historical observations and changing trends along with model results to
determine whether and how climate change may have influenced the event.
The
strongest evidence for a human influence was found for
temperature-related events --- the increased intensity of numerous heat
waves, diminished snowpack in the Cascades, record-low Arctic sea ice
extent in March and the extraordinary extent and duration of Alaska
wildfires.
“After five years of the BAMS Explaining Extreme
Events report, we’re seeing mounting evidence that climate change is
making heat waves more extreme in many regions around the world,” said
lead editor Stephanie C. Herring, a scientist with NOAA’s National
Centers for Environmental Information. "As we get better at
distinguishing the influence of climate change from natural variability,
the local significance and impacts of this global phenomenon are
becoming clearer."
0 comments:
Post a Comment