Climate change made Siberian heatwave 600 times more likely – study
Human fingerprint on record temperatures has rarely, if ever, been clearer, says report The record-breaking heatwave in the Siberian Arctic was made at least 600 times more likely by human-caused climate change, according to a study . Between January and June, temperatures in the far north of Russia were more than 5C above average , causing permafrost to melt, buildings to collapse, and sparking an unusually early and intense start to the forest fires season. On 20 June, a monitoring station in Verkhoyansk registered a record high of 38C. An attribution study shows such prolonged heat over the first six months of the year would have been almost impossible without the effect of greenhouse gas emissions from industry, transport and farming. The team of researchers from international universities and meteorological services, including the PP Shirshov Institute of Oceanology in the Russian Academy of Science, calculated this human impact added at least 2C of warming to the region. The authors of the study say the Siberian heat would happen less than once in every 80,000 years without human interference. Andrew Ciavarella, a lead author of the research and senior detection and attribution scientist at the Met Office, said the findings were staggering. This research is further evidence of the extreme temperatures we can expect to see more frequently around the world in a warming global climate. Importantly, an increasing frequency of these extreme heat events can be moderated by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Scientists say the human fingerprint has rarely, if ever, been clearer. This is the largest signal we have seen, said Friederike Otto, the acting director of Oxfords Environmental Change Institute and a co-lead of the World Weather Attribution initiative. This study shows again just how much of a game-changer climate change is with respect to heatwaves. As emissions continue to rise, we need to think about building resilience to extreme heat all over the world, even in Arctic communities which would have seemed nonsensical not very long ago. Greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels, forest destruction and other human activities are trapping heat and putting more energy into the climate system. Hotter air means heatwaves are much more likely. For example, scientists now say the unprecedented heat and wildfires across the northern hemisphere in 2018 could not have occurred without human-induced climate change . In Australia, the scorching summer of 2016-17 in New South Wales was made at least 50 times more likely by global heating , linking it directly to climate change. Hotter air can also carry more water vapour, meaning more intense rain and more flooding. Another important factor in the northern hemisphere is the impact of changes in the Arctic. The polar region is heating more rapidly, reducing the temperature difference with lower latitudes. There is strong evidence that this is weakening the planetary waves (including the jet stream) that normally meander over Europe, Asia and North America. When these waves stall, weather gets fixed over regions and becomes extreme. This has been linked to past floods in Pakistan, heatwaves in Russia and drought in California. Most of the planets trapped heat goes into the oceans and rising sea temperatures mean more energy for hurricanes and typhoons. The deluge delivered in the US by Hurricane Harvey in 2017 was made three times more likely by climate change . Rising sea level also means storms cause more coastal damage. Natural variability would cause some extreme weather, even without global heating, but human impacts on the climate make such extremes more likely. Carbon Brief analysed more than 230 studies and found 95% of heatwaves were made more likely or worse by climate change. For droughts, 65% were definitely affected by our hotter world, while the figure for floods was 57%. The need for stronger resilience was evident when melting permafrost and poorly maintained equipment led to one of Russias worst oil spills, from a power station near the industrial city of Norilsk, on 29 May. Prof Olga Zolina, of the Institute of Oceanology in Moscow and another lead author, said the fate of Norilsk could be an indicator of what lies in store for other northern communities. It means we should do something. This town is very small, with about 1,000 inhabitants. But there are other bigger cities in the Arctic circle. For them the mounting high temperatures are very important. Concerns are also growing that the high temperatures are worsening positive feedback loops by melting heat-reflecting ice and increasing the range and intensity of wildfires in Siberia, which is home to the worlds largest forest. The seasons fires started unusually early, in April, and have been detected further north than ever before. According to the EUs Copernicus satellite monitoring service, Siberian blazes released 59 megatonnes of carbon dioxide in June, the highest amount on record. Nasa says some embers smoulder through the winter in peatlands and then flare back to life in the spring. The dangers of such zombie fires is increased by warmer temperatures. The melting of the tundra also increases the risks of a release of methane , a highly potent greenhouse gas. Since the middle of June, the extent of the fires has more than doubled to more than a million hectares. The Arctic is warming faster than anywhere on the planet, but the trend towards more extreme conditions is apparent elsewhere. At the start of the year, Australia had unprecedented bushfires and Antarctica registered exceptionally high temperatures . Some scientists believe this calendar year could break the heat record set in 2016. Gavin Schmidt, the director of the Nasa Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, said this week there was now a three-in-four chance that 2020 would be the hottest year ever, up from his 60% estimate in April . The UK Met Office is more cautious. Despite several record months, it said global average surface temperatures in 2020 were still not at 2016 levels and a cooling La Nina was now developing. While 2020 is running very high, there is no guarantee of a record this year, said Prof Adam Scaife , the head of Met Office long-range prediction.