Climate change made Europe’s mega-heatwave five times more likely

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Climate change made Europe’s mega-heatwave five times more likely

Scientists raced to study whether the scorching temperatures last week were linked to global warming.

France was one of the places affected by a heatwave that hit Europe around 26 June.Credit: Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu Agency/Getty

After a series of unusually hot summers, France and other parts of Europe last week experienced another intense heatwave that broke temperature records across the continent.For one group of climate scientists, the event presented a rare opportunity: to rapidly analyse whether the cause of the heatwave — which made headlines around the world — could be attributed to global warming. After a seven-day analysis, their results are in: climate change made the temperatures reached in France last week at least five times more likely to occur than in a world without global warming.
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The scientists with the World Weather Attribution Project decided to take action when they saw the heatwave coming and ended up performing a real-time analysis while at a climate conference in Toulouse, France. As they met at the International Conference on Statistical Climatology, the city and most of France baked in searing temperatures — the southeastern town of Gallargues-le-Montueux broke national temperature records, hitting 45.9°C on 28 June.“We discussed our approach and gathered data and looked at climate models between talks,” says Friederike Otto, a climate researcher at the University of Oxford, UK. “It was really good to have our attribution group all in one place and discuss our work with others. We got a lot of helpful feedback from the meeting.”Attribution scienceTo find out whether global warming has affected the likelihood of a real-life event, scientists look at existing weather records and compare them with models, including simulations of how the weather would behave in a world that isn’t warming. The concept has matured since it was conceived more than a decade ago, but it is necessarily probabilistic by nature.“Some say the uncertainties are too big,” says Otto. “There are indeed caveats, mostly to do with imperfect climate models. But even with large uncertainty bars we think it is useful to provide quantitative evidence for how climate change is affecting extreme weather,” she says.Using their models, the researchers calculated that the average temperatures reached over the three hottest days in France — around 28°C — were at least five times more likely to happen because of climate change. But in a second analysis that looked at historical temperature records over the past century rather than models, the team calculated that the likelihood of such a heatwave in June has in fact increased 100 times since around 1900, owing to the combined influence of climate change and other factors such as air pollution.The probability calculated by the models is likely to be an underestimate, say the researchers. That’s because unlike the real-world data, the simulations consider only climate-related factors, and don’t represent aspects such as changes in cloud cover, land use, irrigation and air pollution, which all seem to have an influence on temperature, says Robert Vautard, a climate researcher at the Laboratory for Climate Sciences and the Environment in Gif-sur-Yvette, France, who is part of the attribution team.“Climate models are missing something when it comes to capture fairly short-lived heat events,” says Dim Coumou, a climate scientist at the Free University of Amsterdam who wasn’t involved in the study. “But that doesn’t make the results less alarming. Heat waves will strongly increase with climate change, and that’s a big problem for society.”Public serviceTo date, more than 200 attribution studies have examined whether climate change made particular events — including heat spells, droughts, floods and storms — more likely. Researchers found that about two-thirds of the extreme events they analysed were made more likely, or more severe, by the build-up of greenhouse-gases in the atmosphere. For example, an analysis of a heatwave that hit parts of Europe in July last year, which was less intense but longer-lived than the latest one, found that climate change made its occurrence more than twice as likely in many of the places affected.Some weather agencies now plan to make climate-attribution studies part of their public services. The German weather service and the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service are preparing to routinely analyse the extent to which climate change influences weather in Germany and Europe, and publish the results in near real-time.Public interest in climate-science information is rising sharply thanks in part to youth protests urging action by adults — most notably the Fridays for Future campaign launched by Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg.I’ve been speaking to journalists at least every other day for months,” says Otto. “It’s crazy, but it has really become a central part of my work.”

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