Morrow County Sentinel.com

This summer is 'what global warming looks like'

WASHINGTON (AP) — Is it just freak­ish weather or some­thing more? Cli­mate sci­en­tists sug­gest that if you want a glimpse of some of the worst of global warm­ing, take a look at U.S. weather in recent weeks.

Hor­ren­dous wild­fires. Oppres­sive heat waves. Dev­as­tat­ing droughts. Flood­ing from giant del­uges. And a pow­er­ful freak wind storm called a derecho.

These are the kinds of extremes experts have pre­dicted will come with cli­mate change, although it’s far too early to say that is the cause. Nor will they say global warm­ing is the rea­son 3,215 daily high tem­per­a­ture records were set in the month of June.

Sci­en­tif­i­cally link­ing indi­vid­ual weather events to cli­mate change takes inten­sive study, com­pli­cated math­e­mat­ics, com­puter mod­els and lots of time. Some­times it isn’t caused by global warm­ing. Weather is always vari­able; freak things happen.

And this weather has been local. Europe, Asia and Africa aren’t hav­ing sim­i­lar dis­as­ters now, although they’ve had their own extreme events in recent years.

But since at least 1988, cli­mate sci­en­tists have warned that cli­mate change would bring, in gen­eral, increased heat waves, more droughts, more sud­den down­pours, more wide­spread wild­fires and wors­en­ing storms. In the United States, those extremes are hap­pen­ing here and now.

So far this year, more than 2.1 mil­lion acres have burned in wild­fires, more than 113 mil­lion peo­ple in the U.S. were in areas under extreme heat advi­sories last Fri­day, two-thirds of the coun­try is expe­ri­enc­ing drought, and ear­lier in June, del­uges flooded Min­nesota and Florida.

This is what global warm­ing looks like at the regional or per­sonal level,” said Jonathan Over­peck, pro­fes­sor of geo­sciences and atmos­pheric sci­ences at the Uni­ver­sity of Ari­zona. “The extra heat increases the odds of worse heat waves, droughts, storms and wild­fire. This is cer­tainly what I and many other cli­mate sci­en­tists have been warn­ing about.”

Kevin Tren­berth, head of cli­mate analy­sis at the National Cen­ter for Atmos­pheric Research in fire-charred Col­orado, said these are the very record-breaking con­di­tions he has said would hap­pen, but many peo­ple wouldn’t lis­ten. So it’s I told-you-so time, he said.

As recently as March, a spe­cial report an extreme events and dis­as­ters by the Nobel Prize-winning Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Panel on Cli­mate Change warned of “unprece­dented extreme weather and cli­mate events.” Its lead author, Chris Field of the Carnegie Insti­tu­tion and Stan­ford Uni­ver­sity, said Mon­day, “It’s really dra­matic how many of the pat­terns that we’ve talked about as the expres­sion of the extremes are hit­ting the U.S. right now.”

What we’re see­ing really is a win­dow into what global warm­ing really looks like,” said Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity geo­sciences and inter­na­tional affairs pro­fes­sor Michael Oppen­heimer. “It looks like heat. It looks like fires. It looks like this kind of envi­ron­men­tal disasters.”

Oppen­heimer said that on Thurs­day. That was before the East Coast was hit with triple-digit tem­per­a­tures and before a dere­cho — a large, pow­er­ful and long-lasting straight-line wind storm — blew from Chicago to Wash­ing­ton. The storm and its after­math killed more than 20 peo­ple and left mil­lions with­out elec­tric­ity. Experts say it had energy read­ings five times that of nor­mal thunderstorms.

Fueled by the record high heat, this was among the strongest of this type of storm in the region in recent his­tory, said research mete­o­rol­o­gist Harold Brooks of the National Severe Storm Lab­o­ra­tory in Nor­man, Okla. Sci­en­tists expect “non-tornadic wind events” like this one and other thun­der­storms to increase with cli­mate change because of the heat and insta­bil­ity, he said.

Such pat­terns haven’t hap­pened only in the past week or two. The spring and win­ter in the U.S. were the warmest on record and among the least snowy, set­ting the stage for the weather extremes to come, sci­en­tists say.

Since Jan. 1, the United States has set more than 40,000 hot tem­per­a­ture records, but fewer than 6,000 cold tem­per­a­ture records, accord­ing to the National Oceanic and Atmos­pheric Admin­is­tra­tion. Through most of last cen­tury, the U.S. used to set cold and hot records evenly, but in the first decade of this cen­tury Amer­ica set two hot records for every cold one, said Jerry Meehl, a cli­mate extreme expert at the National Cen­ter for Atmos­pheric Research. This year the ratio is about 7 hot to 1 cold. Some com­puter mod­els say that ratio will hit 20-to-1 by mid­cen­tury, Meehl said.

In the future you would expect larger, longer more intense heat waves and we’ve seen that in the last few sum­mers,” NOAA Cli­mate Mon­i­tor­ing chief Derek Arndt said.

The 100-degree heat, drought, early snow­pack melt and bee­tles wak­ing from hiber­na­tion early to strip trees all com­bined to set the stage for the cur­rent unusual spread of wild­fires in the West, said Uni­ver­sity of Mon­tana ecosys­tems pro­fes­sor Steven Run­ning, an expert on wildfires.

While at least 15 cli­mate sci­en­tists told The Asso­ci­ated Press that this long hot U.S. sum­mer is con­sis­tent with what is to be expected in global warm­ing, his­tory is full of such extremes, said John Christy at the Uni­ver­sity of Alabama in Huntsville. He’s a global warm­ing skep­tic who says, “The guilty party in my view is Mother Nature.”

But the vast major­ity of main­stream cli­mate sci­en­tists, such as Meehl, dis­agree: “This is what global warm­ing is like, and we’ll see more of this as we go into the future.”

Randa Wagner Posted by on Jul 9 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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