How Weird Is the Heat in Portland, Seattle and
Vancouver? Off the Charts.
By Aatish Bhatia, Henry Fountain and Kevin QuealyJune
29, 2021
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/06/29/upshot/portland-seattle-vancouver-weather.html
Heat waves
and the “heat domes” that can cause them aren’t rare, but the recent weather
that’s been smothering the Pacific Northwest has little precedent in at least
four decades of record-keeping.
To
understand the magnitude of the departure from historical norms, it helps to
visualize it. The map above, created by Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, a climate
scientist at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, reflects
temperatures since 1979. It shows the extent of the areas experiencing extreme
temperatures in the past week.
The heat
has been not only widespread, but also intense, in some places surpassing
records by double digits.
In
Vancouver, British Columbia, this past weekend’s temperatures were far above
norms for this time of year, and a village in British Columbia, Lytton, reached
nearly 116 degrees, the highest recorded temperature for any place in Canada in
its history. The record was broken again Monday as Lytton reached 118 degrees.
In Seattle,
there have been only two other days in the last 50 years with temperatures in
the triple digits: in 2009 and 1994.
The heat
has resulted from a wide and deep mass of high-pressure air that, because of a
wavy jet stream, parked itself over much of the region. Also known as a heat
dome, such an enormous high-pressure zone acts like a lid on a pot, trapping
heat so that it accumulates. And with the West beset by drought, there’s been
plenty of heat to trap.
In Seattle,
Portland and other areas west of the Cascades, hot air blowing from the east
was further warmed as it descended the mountains, raising temperatures even
more.
Climate is
naturally variable, so periods of high heat are to be expected. But in this
episode scientists see the fingerprints of climate change, brought on by
human-caused emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
Karin
Bumbaco, Washington’s assistant state climatologist, said that any definitive
climate-change link could be demonstrated only by a type of analysis called an
attribution study. “But it’s a safe assumption, in my view, to blame increasing
greenhouse gases for at least some portion of this event,” she said.
On a global
average, the world has warmed about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit since 1900. “When
you have that warmer baseline, when you do get these extreme events it's just
going to get that much warmer,” she said.
This heat
wave is also unusual because it occurred earlier than most. Those two previous
triple-digits days in Seattle, for example, happened in late July, about 30
days later.
This one
occurred just a few days after the summer solstice, which may have contributed
to the extreme conditions. “The days are longer, and we’re not getting that
cool-off at night,” she said.
Extreme
temperatures are getting more common
Climate
change is also making episodes of extreme heat more frequent, longer and more
intense, said Erica Fleishman, director of the Oregon Climate Change Research
Institute at Oregon State University.
In these
two cities, days with temperatures that are well above historical averages have
increased, particularly starting in the 2010s:
“We can say
extreme weather is happening more as climate changes, and will continue to
happen more,” she said. “This heat wave is extraordinary, but this in a sense
is not likely to be the last.”
Heat waves
eventually end, and for the coastal cities what’s called a “marine push,” when
cooler air blows in from the Pacific, is already moderating temperatures.
For inland
areas, however, the high heat will remain. Eastern Washington might exceed 118
degrees on Tuesday, Ms. Bumbaco said, which would set a record for the state.
And
temperatures are still expected to be quite high for the next two or three
weeks, she said — not 30 or 40 degrees higher than normal, but 10 to 15.
“That might
actually have more implications for our agriculture and potential wildfires,”
she said. The heat wave won’t be as extreme, she said, “but it’s going to last
longer.”
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