Climate change: human fingerprint found on global extreme weather
Source: The Guardian
Climate change: human fingerprint found on global extreme weather
Global warming makes temperature patterns that cause heatwaves,
droughts and floods across Europe, north America and Asia more
likely, scientists find
Damian Carrington
Monday 27 March 2017 11.01 BST
The fingerprint of human-caused climate change has been found on heatwaves, droughts and floods across the world, according to scientists.
The discovery indicates that the impacts of global warming are already being felt by society and adds further urgency to the need to cut carbon emissions. A key factor is the fast-melting Arctic, which is now strongly linked to extreme weather across Europe, Asia and north America.
Rising greenhouse gases in the atmosphere have long been expected to lead to increasing extreme weather events, as they trap extra energy in the atmosphere. But linking global warming to particular events is difficult because the climate is naturally variable.
The new work analysed a type of extreme weather event known to be caused by changes in planetary waves such as Californias ongoing record drought, and recent heatwaves in the US and Russia, as well as severe floods in Pakistan in 2010.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/mar/27/climate-change-human-fingerprint-found-on-global-extreme-weather
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Related: Influence of Anthropogenic Climate Change on Planetary Wave Resonance and Extreme Weather Events (Scientific Reports)