Human-Caused Global Warming Contributed to Weather Extremes: Report
http://www.wunderground.com/news/report-human-caused-climate-change-2013-weather-extremes-20140929
Scientists
announced Monday that human-caused climate change contributed to and/or
amplified nine of 2013's most extreme weather events, making one of the most
definitive statements yet on the direct link between individual weather
extremes and human-induced climate change.
In a
new report released in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
(BAMS) and organized by the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
20 different groups of scientists studied how 16 extreme weather events came to
fruition in 2013. In their analyses, the different groups conducted independent
peer-reviewed scientific studies on the same events with the hope of sorting
out human influences from natural variation in climate and weather.
The
report found strong evidence that human-caused climate change -- particularly
the burning of fossil fuels -- amplified temperature related events, including
five heat waves across the globe. Less compelling evidence linked humans to the
drought in California. On the other hand, the report found no link between
humans and Winter Storm Atlas, which dumped
up to 55 inches of snow on South Dakota last
October, heavy rain in Colorado that flooded
more than a dozen cities in and around the
Denver metro area and heavy rain and flooding events in Europe.
The
scientists hope that the report will help bridge the gap between the public,
which sometimes incorrectly correlates weather events with climate change, and
the science community, which looks to provide a scientific foundation to the
link between the two.
Here
are some notable highlights for some of the extreme events:
Australia, Japan, China and Korea's Heat
Waves
Of all
the events the various studies analyzed in the report, scientists were the most
adamant about the link between human-caused climate change and a rash of
extreme heat waves in 2013.
"The
findings indicate that human-caused climate change greatly increased the risk
for the extreme heat waves assessed in this report," the report's authors
said in part.
For
instance, Australia experienced the hottest year on record in more than a
century, prompting the country's meteorological bureau to
adjust the color scale on its maps to
incorporate more extreme temperatures, Mashable reports. All three independent
studies on Australia linked the event to human-induced climate change.
Speaking
on the event, Peter Stott
of the U.K.'s meteorology office, one of the study's
editors, told the Associated Press that "it's almost impossible" to
explain the event without human-induced climate change.
Other
examples took the human link a step further, hinting at the future of more
extreme temperature highs in the decades to come. That example came from Korea,
which experienced one of its hottest summers on record in 2013. Temperatures
there were the warmest in more than 50 years, sparking a massive energy demand that crippled
the country's power supply, the Wall Street Journal
notes.
The
team of scientists that studied the Korean heat wave not only linked the warm
temperatures directly to emissions from human sources, but also said that
extremely warm summers are now 10 times more likely in Korea than they were
before humans entered the fold.
"We
find that a strong long-term increasing trend in the observed SST [Sea Surface
Temperatures] near northern East Asia during the past 60 years cannot be
explained without the inclusion of recent human-induced greenhouse gas
forcing," the study concluded in part.
California's Drought
Three
separate studies analyzed California's ongoing worst drought
on record and two of them found no evidence
directly linking humans to the event. However, the first study, led by Daniel
Swain of Stanford University, did find that the same atmospheric conditions --
namely an exceptional ridge of high pressure that parked over the Northern
Pacific starting in January 2013 and was dubbed the "Ridiculously
Resilient Ridge" -- that led to California's drought "occur much more
frequently in the present climate than in the absence of human emissions."
Winter Storm Atlas and South
Dakota/Colorado's Extreme Rainfall
While
authors of the individual studies analyzing both of these events didn't
directly link humans to their occurrence, the studies did find that
human-induced climate change would actually make extreme precipitation events
like these less likely in both areas in the coming years. However, the authors
of the study on Colorado's rain and flooding were quick to note that though an
area like Colorado is less likely to see extreme rainfall like 2013's event,
the globe as a whole is forecast to experience more extreme rainfall events by
the end of the century.
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