Canada, US heat wave 'on steroids' due to climate
change, say experts
PUBLISHED JUL
1, 2021, 10:34 AM SGT
WASHINGTON
(AFP) - The western United States and Canada would likely have experienced a
heat wave in the past week even without climate change. But the scale and
severity of the record-breaking temperatures were undoubtedly multiplied by the
changes to our atmosphere, experts say.
The US
states of Washington and Oregon, as well as British Columbia in Canada, boiled
this week in all-time high temperatures that have caused dozens of deaths.
"This
is one of the most extreme heat waves that we have seen on Earth, in many
years, anywhere, in terms of the deviation from the typical conditions in this
particular part of the world," said Daniel Swain, a climate expert at
UCLA, noting that temperature records are rarely broken by "more than a
degree."
"In
this case, those records were obliterated," he said. "It's really the
magnitude and the persistence of this one that is just genuinely
shocking."
Canada set
an all-time record on Tuesday. In Oregon, temperatures were higher than the
maximum recorded in Las Vegas, in the middle of the Nevada desert.
And all
this in a region with a normally temperate climate at this time of the year.
The
phenomenon causing the scorching heat is called a "heat dome." Hot
air is trapped by high pressure fronts, and as it is pushed back to the ground,
it heats up even more.
"It's
sort of like a bicycle pump," said Philip Mote, professor of atmospheric
science at Oregon State University. "If you compress air into a bike tire,
it warms the air."
The
condition also prevents clouds from forming, allowing for more radiation from the
sun to hit the ground.
Such
conditions are not unheard of: "The pattern was similar to how we always
get our heat waves," Karin Bumbaco, a climatologist at the University of
Washington, told AFP.
"We've
seen that pattern before, but it was just much stronger than usual."
Climate
like 'steroids'
So what is
causing the precedent-shattering highs?
"A
world without climate change would have still had a heat wave in the Pacific
Northwest. It just would have been not quite as record-setting," said Zeke
Hausfather, a climate expert at the Breakthrough Institute.
"Climate
is like steroids for the weather," he said "If a baseball player or
Olympic athlete is taking steroids, they're still going to perform better some
days and worse some days, but on average, their performance is going to go up.
And so climate is doing something similar to the weather. That makes it more
likely to experience these sort of extremes."
So-called
"attribution studies" will be conducted to determine the exact causes
of the event.
But "I
think it's safe to say that there's at least some components of global climate
change that contributed to this event," said Bumbaco.
Temperatures
are generally higher in this region, which has warmed by around three deg F
(1.6 deg C) in the past 100 years, so it makes sense for records to be broken
little by little.
However,
"it is very possible that climate change increased this heat wave to an
even greater degree" than that, said Swain, the UCLA expert.
For
example, the drought that has plagued the region for weeks may have bolstered
the heat dome because the energy of the sun's rays is no longer being used to
evaporate water, so instead it warms the atmosphere more.
And climate
change is already "increasing the severity of drought" in parts of
western North American, said Swain. "The answer to the question of whether
it would have happened to this extent without climate change is clearly
no."
Adaptation
It is hard
to predict just how often such heat waves will occur again.
"This
particular event was so extreme that it will remain unusual, even in a warming
climate," said Swain. "But it has gone from the realm of being
essentially impossible to being something that we may well see again."
"The
bad news is that even if we could wave a magic wand and get all our emissions
to zero tomorrow, the world isn't going to cool back down," said
Hausfather.
"We're
stuck with the warming... And so we need to be prepared for these sorts of
events to be more frequent."
Experts
insist on the need to adapt in the medium term: by equipping populations with
air conditioners (even if they release harmful emissions in the long term), by
rethinking the structure of buildings so that they reflect rather than retain
heat, and by planting vegetation.
But all are
unanimous: "In the longer term, obviously, the best way to prevent these
things from happening in the first place, or to reduce how much worse they
could get, is to reduce global emissions of greenhouse gases," said Mote.

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