‘Drastic’ rise in high Arctic lightning has
scientists worried
The region’s air typically doesn’t suit strikes – so
they have become an important climate crisis indicator
Lightning
strikes
Thunderstorms
need moisture, instability and lift. Disappearance of sea ice means more water
is able to evaporate, adding moisture to the atmosphere.
Léonie
Chao-Fong
Fri 7 Jan
2022 17.53 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jan/07/lightning-high-arctic-rise-scientists-worried
The high
Arctic saw a dramatic rise in lightning in 2021 in what could be one of the
most spectacular manifestations of the climate crisis.
In a region
where sightings were once rare, the Earth’s northernmost region saw 7,278
lightning strikes in 2021 – nearly double as many as the previous nine years
combined.
Arctic air
typically lacks the convective heat required to create lightning so the latest
findings, published in the Finnish firm Vaisala’s annual lightning report, have
scientists like Vaisala’s meteorologist and lightning applications manager,
Chris Vagasky, worried.
“Over the
last 10 years, overall lightning counts north of the Arctic Circle have been
fairly consistent,” Vagasky said. “But at the highest latitudes of the planet –
north of 80° – the increase has been drastic. Such a significant shift
certainly causes you to raise your eyebrows.”
With
temperatures rising in the Arctic at three times the global average, tracking
lightning in the region has become an important indicator of the climate
crisis.
Three
things are required to generate thunderstorms – moisture, instability and lift.
The disappearance of sea ice means more water is able to evaporate, adding
moisture to the atmosphere. Higher temperatures and atmospheric instability
create the perfect conditions for lightning. Monitoring how lightning trends
change in the Arctic can therefore reveal a lot about how the atmosphere is
changing in response to shifts in climate.
“Changes in
the Arctic can mean changes in the weather at home,” Vagasky said. “All weather
is local, but what happens at your house depends on how the atmosphere is
behaving elsewhere throughout the world. Changes to conditions in the Arctic
could cause more extreme cold outbreaks, more heatwaves, or extreme changes in
precipitation to Europe.”
The
devastating wildfires that raged across Europe and North America last summer
were at least in part sparked by lightning. Typically less than 15% of
wildfires in any given year are caused by lightning, but these fires burn more
acreage than human-caused fires. Identifying the conditions favourable for
lightning-triggered wildfires is crucial to react quickly to strikes.
The risk of
being hit by lightning in the Arctic is still low, but the increased
probability of lightning could threaten communities that have not had to deal
with frequent lightning in the past. People on the flat tundra or ocean are
vulnerable to lightning strikes, and lightning puts electrical and other
infrastructure at risk of damage.
In the US,
which saw the second-highest number of lightning strikes in 2021 after Brazil,
Vagasky and his team tracked more than 194m incidences – 24m more than observed
in 2020. A 2014 study forecast a 12% increase in the frequency of lightning
strikes with every one degree Celsius increase in temperature.
“A changing
climate may increase the potential for lightning-triggered wildfires,” Vagasky
said. “Scientists can’t tie a lightning strike from one day to the changes in
our climate, but monitoring trends of lightning in the Arctic is especially
important and something that will need to be studied now and in the future.”
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