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The increasing likelihood of temperatures above 30 to 40 °C in the United Kingdom

Earth Sciences

The increasing likelihood of temperatures above 30 to 40 °C in the United Kingdom

N. Christidis, M. Mccarthy, et al.

As UK summers heat up, temperatures above 35 °C are becoming increasingly common, with the potential for areas to hit 30 °C at least once per decade by 2100. This impactful research by Nikolaos Christidis, Mark McCarthy, and Peter A. Stott reveals the alarming trends in heatwaves and the urgent need for mitigation strategies.... show more
Abstract
As European heatwaves become more severe, summers in the United Kingdom (UK) are also getting warmer. The UK record temperature of 38.7 °C set in Cambridge in July 2019 prompts the question of whether exceeding 40 °C is now within reach. Here, we show how human influence is increasing the likelihood of exceeding 30, 35 and 40 °C locally. We utilise observations to relate local to UK mean extremes and apply the resulting relationships to climate model data in a risk-based attribution methodology. We find that temperatures above 35 °C are becoming increasingly common in the southeast, while by 2100 many areas in the north are likely to exceed 30 °C at least once per decade. Summers which see days above 40 °C somewhere in the UK have a return time of 100–300 years at present, but, without mitigating greenhouse gas emissions, this can decrease to 3.5 years by 2100.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jun 30, 2020
Authors
Nikolaos Christidis, Mark McCarthy, Peter A. Stott
Tags
heatwaves
UK summers
climate change
temperature extremes
human influence
mitigation
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