August Heat

Main Category: Water - Air Quality / Agriculture
Also Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 20 Aug 2009 - 3:00 PDT

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If you are wilting under the summer heat, consider this: your child may one day think of summer 2009 as "back in the cool old days." To illustrate expected increases in extreme summer heat, scientists at Climate Central have analyzed climate change projections made with global climate models.

Scientific literature based on these models anticipates much more frequent occurrences of hot days, "heat waves" (very high temperatures sustained over several days), and extremely warm summer seasons. Beyond being uncomfortable, these projected increases in extreme heat will have important societal impacts, including: Climate Central's analysis of model projections suggests that across a large number of U.S. cities, the average number of days in August with temperatures over 95 degrees Fahrenheit could nearly triple by 2050, and the average number of days over 100 degrees could nearly double.

Climate Central's Associate Director for Strategic Initiatives, Dr. Ben Strauss, emphasizes that the numbers are not predictions. "We're talking about best estimates and averages," says Strauss. "No matter how close the projections turn out to be, some years will have more hot August days, and others will have fewer."

Climate Central is a nonprofit science and media organization created to provide clear and objective information about climate change and its potential solutions. Its work has appeared on PBS's The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, TIME.com, newsweek.com, Scientific American, grist.org and beyond. Staff scientists drew on regional scenarios from a dozen highly sophisticated computer climate models to compare 1980 and 1990 averages with 2050 projections in three categories: All of these measures were projected to increase or stay level in every city analyzed. The bottom line is that locations across the nation are likely to experience significant jumps in the number of extreme hot days in August and other summer months, from New York to Los Angeles, and from Florida to the Midwest to Seattle, which just experienced an unusual heat wave earlier this summer. More information on the projections, the methods used and their limitations is available at http://www.climatecentral.org.

Worldwide, since 1995, tens of thousands of people have died in heat waves. Other important impacts include increases in demand for energy (particularly electricity for cooling), and increases in urban and agricultural water demand.

The severity of increases in extreme heat and their impacts will depend on the extent of future use of fossil fuels. "We do have some choice here," says Dr. Berrien Moore III, Climate Central's Executive Director. "How hot it will get will depend on the choices we make about energy and transportation in the years to come."

For more information on Climate Central and its analysis of climate change projections of August extreme heat: http://www.climatecentral.org

For more information on projections of extreme heat and other weather and climate extremes:
"Weather and Climate Extremes in a Changing Climate. Regions of Focus: North America, Hawaii, Caribbean, and U.S. Pacific Islands." U.S. Climate Change Science Program Synthesis and Assessment Product 3.3 (June 2008). Available at http://www.globalchange.gov/publications/reports/scientific-assessments/saps/300

For more information on societal impacts of more frequent extreme heat and other changes in climate:
Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States, U.S. Global Change Research Program, 2009. Available at http://www.globalchange.gov/usimpacts

Source:
Iveta Weinberg
Climate Central

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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