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Anthropogenically-driven increases in the risks of summertime compound hot extremes

Earth Sciences

Anthropogenically-driven increases in the risks of summertime compound hot extremes

J. Wang, Y. Chen, et al.

Explore the alarming rise in summer compound hot extremes in the Northern Hemisphere, as researchers Jun Wang, Yang Chen, Simon F.B. Tett, Zhongwei Yan, Panmao Zhai, Jinming Feng, and Jiangjiang Xia reveal a staggering projected increase in frequency and intensity by 2100 under unchecked emissions. This research underscores the pressing need to address our warming climate.... show more
Abstract
Compared to individual hot days/nights, compound hot extremes that combine daytime and nighttime heat are more impactful. However, past and future changes in compound hot extremes as well as their underlying drivers and societal impacts remain poorly understood. Here we show that during 1960–2012, significant increases in Northern Hemisphere average frequency (−1.03 days decade−1) and intensity (−0.28 °C decade−1) of summertime compound hot extremes arise primarily from summer-mean warming. The forcing of rising greenhouse gases (GHGs) is robustly detected and largely accounts for observed trends. Observationally-constrained projections suggest an approximate eightfold increase in hemispheric-average frequency and a threefold growth in intensity of summertime compound hot extremes by 2100 (relative to 2012), given uncurbed GHG emissions. Accordingly, end-of-century population exposure to compound hot extremes is projected to be four to eight times the 2010s level, dependent on demographic and climate scenarios.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 11, 2020
Authors
Jun Wang, Yang Chen, Simon F.B. Tett, Zhongwei Yan, Panmao Zhai, Jinming Feng, Jiangjiang Xia
Tags
compound hot extremes
Northern Hemisphere
temperature increase
greenhouse gases
climate change
population exposure
summer warming
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