Role of climate change in extreme weather

The link between temperature extremes and global heating is much more direct, said Philip. Swings in temperature are not necessarily more extreme but as global average temperatures rise, heat waves have grown hotter and cold spells milder.

By :  DW Bureau
Update: 2022-08-31 09:30 GMT
Representative Image

After scorching heat waves withered crops and dried up mighty rivers in the Northern Hemisphere, catastrophic super flooding in Pakistan has so far killed more than a 1,000 people, displacing millions more. Pakistan’s climate change minister, Sherry Rehman, told DW much of the flood area she surveyed from helicopter looked like a “small ocean” because of the relentless rain that followed soaring temperatures earlier in the year and a season of forest fires. “It is a climate catastrophe, I’m very clear,” said Rehman. That heating the planet by burning fossil fuels is broadly making extreme weather more frequent and intense is well established. Scientists have been sounding the alarm bells on that for years.

But just how big a factor is climate change in deadly flooding like that in Pakistan or in the heat waves that dried up Europe this summer? Establishing a direct causal link between rising global average temperature and a single storm, for instance, is difficult and an evolving science. “Extreme weather has always existed and will always exist,” said Sjoukje Philip, a climate researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI). “But climate change might, however, have an impact on the probability or extremity of the extreme weather events.”Determining climate change’s contribution is exactly what Philip, who works with an international research team at the World Weather Attribution initiative (WWA), is trying to do by conducting real-time attribution analysis of global weather events as they occur.

Weather catastrophes are never down to just one cause. They result from natural factors, as well as human-made ones. For instance, large-scale deforestation and paving over green areas that would usually absorb heavy rainfall with concrete and tarmac can worsen flooding.

Climate change is a human factor too, of course, but is never the sole trigger of a weather catastrophe. Its influence depends on the weather phenomenon in question and is weighted differently for each event, said German climatologist Friederike Otto from Imperial College in London and a founder of the WWA research team. Climate change plays a big role for some events, said Otto, “but for most others like heavy rainfall or droughts, it is quite often a relatively small factor compared to others.”

So while global heating alone cannot cause heavy rain, it can facilitate prime conditions and increase the amount of precipitation. “A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture, which can result in heavier rainfall,” said Philip. But where and when that falls depends on a variety of factors, she added.

The link between temperature extremes and global heating is much more direct, said Philip. Swings in temperature are not necessarily more extreme but as global average temperatures rise, heat waves have grown hotter and cold spells milder.

Without global heating, recent record temperatures of 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) in the United Kingdom would have been virtually impossible, as would the North American heat wave of 2021, according to WWA analyses. And climate change made deadly early heat waves in India and Pakistan this year 30 times more likely. “With heat waves climate change is really a game changer,” said Friederike Otto.

Climate change impacts also differ from region to region, said Philip. “So even for similar types of extreme weather, it can still be different for different regions.”

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