Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels

<p>Extreme temperatures were experienced over a large part of the Northern Hemisphere during the 2018 boreal summer (hereafter referred to as “NH2018 event”), leading to major impacts on agriculture and society in the affected countries. Previous studies highlighted both the anomalous atmosphe...

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Main Authors: K. Wehrli, M. Hauser, S. I. Seneviratne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2020-10-01
Series:Earth System Dynamics
Online Access:https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/11/855/2020/esd-11-855-2020.pdf
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spelling doaj-2946451314934044a65b314259fc6ac72020-11-25T03:59:52ZengCopernicus PublicationsEarth System Dynamics2190-49792190-49872020-10-011185587310.5194/esd-11-855-2020Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levelsK. WehrliM. HauserS. I. Seneviratne<p>Extreme temperatures were experienced over a large part of the Northern Hemisphere during the 2018 boreal summer (hereafter referred to as “NH2018 event”), leading to major impacts on agriculture and society in the affected countries. Previous studies highlighted both the anomalous atmospheric circulation patterns during the event and the background warming due to human greenhouse gas emissions as main drivers of the event. In this study, we present Earth system model experiments investigating different storylines of the NH2018 event given the same atmospheric circulation and alternative background global warming for no human imprint, the 2018 conditions, and different mean global warming levels 1.5, 2, 3 and 4<span class="inline-formula"> <sup>∘</sup></span>C. The results reveal that the human-induced background warming was a strong contributor to the intensity of the NH2018 event, and that resulting extremes under similar atmospheric circulation conditions at higher levels of global warming would reach dangerous levels. Compared to <span class="inline-formula">9 <i>%</i></span> during the NH2018 event, about <span class="inline-formula">13 <i>%</i></span> (<span class="inline-formula">34 <i>%</i></span>) of the inhabited or agricultural area in the investigated region would reach daily maximum temperatures over <span class="inline-formula">40 <sup>∘</sup></span>C under <span class="inline-formula">2 <sup>∘</sup></span>C (<span class="inline-formula">4 <sup>∘</sup></span>C) of global warming and similar atmospheric circulation conditions.</p>https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/11/855/2020/esd-11-855-2020.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. Wehrli
M. Hauser
S. I. Seneviratne
spellingShingle K. Wehrli
M. Hauser
S. I. Seneviratne
Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
Earth System Dynamics
author_facet K. Wehrli
M. Hauser
S. I. Seneviratne
author_sort K. Wehrli
title Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
title_short Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
title_full Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
title_fullStr Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
title_full_unstemmed Storylines of the 2018 Northern Hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
title_sort storylines of the 2018 northern hemisphere heatwave at pre-industrial and higher global warming levels
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Earth System Dynamics
issn 2190-4979
2190-4987
publishDate 2020-10-01
description <p>Extreme temperatures were experienced over a large part of the Northern Hemisphere during the 2018 boreal summer (hereafter referred to as “NH2018 event”), leading to major impacts on agriculture and society in the affected countries. Previous studies highlighted both the anomalous atmospheric circulation patterns during the event and the background warming due to human greenhouse gas emissions as main drivers of the event. In this study, we present Earth system model experiments investigating different storylines of the NH2018 event given the same atmospheric circulation and alternative background global warming for no human imprint, the 2018 conditions, and different mean global warming levels 1.5, 2, 3 and 4<span class="inline-formula"> <sup>∘</sup></span>C. The results reveal that the human-induced background warming was a strong contributor to the intensity of the NH2018 event, and that resulting extremes under similar atmospheric circulation conditions at higher levels of global warming would reach dangerous levels. Compared to <span class="inline-formula">9 <i>%</i></span> during the NH2018 event, about <span class="inline-formula">13 <i>%</i></span> (<span class="inline-formula">34 <i>%</i></span>) of the inhabited or agricultural area in the investigated region would reach daily maximum temperatures over <span class="inline-formula">40 <sup>∘</sup></span>C under <span class="inline-formula">2 <sup>∘</sup></span>C (<span class="inline-formula">4 <sup>∘</sup></span>C) of global warming and similar atmospheric circulation conditions.</p>
url https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/11/855/2020/esd-11-855-2020.pdf
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