2022 early-summer heatwave in Southern South America: 60 times more likely due to climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Juan Antonio Rivera
Paola A. Arias
Anna A. Sörensson
Mariam Zachariah
Clair Barnes
Sjoukje Philip
Sarah Kew
Robert Vautard
Gerbrand Koren
Izidine Pinto
Maja Vahlberg
Roop Singh
Emmanuel Raju
Sihan Li
Wenchang Yang
Gabriel A. Vecchi
Luke J. Harrington
Friederike E. L. Otto
机构
[1] CCT CONICET,Instituto Argentino de Nivología, Glaciología Y Ciencias Ambientales (IANIGLA)
[2] Universidad de Antioquia,Grupo de Ingeniería Y Gestión Ambiental (GIGA), Escuela Ambiental, Facultad de Ingeniería
[3] Universidad de Buenos Aires,Facultad de Ciencias Exactas Y Naturales
[4] CONICET–Universidad de Buenos Aires,Centro de Investigaciones del Mar Y La Atmósfera
[5] Instituto Franco-Argentino Para El Estudio del Clima Y Sus Impactos (IRL 3351 IFAECI),CNRS–IRD–CONICET–UBA
[6] Imperial College London,Grantham Institute
[7] Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI),Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development
[8] Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace,Department of Public Health
[9] Utrecht University,Department of Geography
[10] Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre,Department of Geosciences
[11] Global Health Section & Copenhagen Centre for Disaster Research,High Meadows Environmental Institute
[12] University of Sheffield,Te Aka Mātuatua School of Science
[13] Princeton University,undefined
[14] Princeton University,undefined
[15] University of Waikato,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2023年 / 176卷
关键词
Southern South America; Heatwave; Attribution; Impacts; Vulnerability;
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摘要
A large area including the central-northern part of Argentina, southern Bolivia, central Chile, and most of Paraguay and Uruguay, experienced record-breaking temperatures during two consecutive heatwaves in late November and early December 2022. During the second heatwave, nine locations in northern Argentina registered their highest maximum temperature of December since at least 1961. Our analysis based on observational and reanalysis datasets indicate that South America, like the rest of the world, has experienced heatwaves increasingly frequently in recent years. The December 2022 heatwave has an estimated return time of 1 in 20 years in the current climate, meaning it has about a 5% chance of happening each year. To estimate how human-caused climate change has influenced the likelihood and intensity of the observed heatwave, we combined climate models with the observation-based data. We found that human-caused climate change made the event about 60 times more likely. A heatwave with a return period of 20 years would be about 1.4 °C less hot in a world without anthropogenic global warming. Heatwaves this early in the summer season pose a substantial risk to human health and are potentially lethal. This risk is aggravated by climate change, but also by other factors such as an aging population, urbanisation and the built environment, and individual behavior and susceptibility to the heat. This highlights the importance of attribution studies in a region already threatened and vulnerable to climate change.
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