![]() Beyond that, the changes to the climate will be too great to overcome with shady trees or white roofs, and at 2C an estimated 1 billion people will suffer extreme heat. The current heatwaves are happening as the earth has warmed by about 1.2C above pre-industrial levels – nations agreed, at the Cop26 UN climate summit last November, to try not to let them rise by more than 1.5C. More heavy-duty adaptation measures include changing the materials we use for buildings, transport networks and other vital infrastructure, to stop windows falling out of their frames, roads from melting in the heat and rails from buckling.īut these measures can only ever be a sticking plaster – only drastic cuts in greenhouse gas emissions will prevent climate chaos. Painting roofs white in hot countries to reflect the sun’s rays, growing ivy on walls in more temperate regions, planting trees for shade, fountains and more green areas in cities can all help. There are ways to reduce the impacts for individuals, and to adapt our cities. Radhika Khosla, associate professor at the Smith School at the University of Oxford, said: “The global community must commit to sustainable cooling, or risk locking the world into a deadly feedback loop, where demand for cooling energy drives further greenhouse gas emissions and results in even more global warming.” Poor people suffer most, as they are the ones out in fields or in factories, or on the street without shelter in the midst of the heat, and they lack the luxury of air-conditioning when they get home.Īir-conditioning itself is a further facet of the problem: its growing use and massive energy consumption threatens to accelerate greenhouse gas emissions, just as we need urgently to bring them down. ![]() This type of heat poses a serious threat to human health, directly as it puts stress on our bodies, and indirectly as it damages crops, causes wildfires and even harms our built environment, such as roads and buildings. “Climate change is a real game changer when it comes to heatwaves: they have increased in frequency, intensity and duration across the world,” she said. ![]() The climate change signal is even detectable in the number of deaths attributed to heatwaves.”įriederike Otto, senior lecturer in climate science at the Grantham Institute, Imperial College London, said heatwaves in Europe alone had increased in frequency by a factor of 100 or more, caused by human actions in pouring greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere. Scientists have shown that many specific heatwaves are more intense because of human-induced climate change. Vikki Thompson, climate scientist at the University of Bristol’s Cabot Institute, explained: “Climate change is making heatwaves hotter and last longer around the world. A study published last month showed that the south Asian heatwave was made 30 times more likely to happen by human influence on the climate. Scientists have been able quickly to prove that these record-breaking temperatures are no natural occurrence. Spain saw the mercury hit 40C in early June as a heatwave swept across Europe, hitting the UK last week. Spring was more like midsummer in the US, with soaring temperatures across the country in May. Scorching weather has continued across the subcontinent, wreaking disaster for millions. Since then, weather stations around the world have seen their mercury rising like a global Mexican wave.Ī heatwave struck India and Pakistan in March, bringing the highest temperatures in that month since records began 122 years ago. To induce a heatwave at one pole may be regarded as a warning heatwaves at both poles at once start to look a lot like climate catastrophe. The region was more than 3C warmer than its long-term average, researchers said. At the north pole, similarly unusual temperatures were also being recorded, astonishing for the time of year when the Arctic should be slowly emerging from its winter deep freeze.
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