Climate change added 41 days of dangerous heat around world in 2024
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[December 27, 2024]
By ALEXA ST. JOHN
People around the world suffered an average of 41 extra days of
dangerous heat this year because of human-caused climate change,
according to a group of scientists who also said that climate change
worsened much of the world's damaging weather throughout 2024.
The analysis from World Weather Attribution and Climate Central
researchers comes at the end of a year that shattered climate record
after climate record as heat across the globe made 2024 likely to be its
hottest ever measured and a slew of other fatal weather events spared
few.
“The finding is devastating but utterly unsurprising: Climate change did
play a role, and often a major role in most of the events we studied,
making heat, droughts, tropical cyclones and heavy rainfall more likely
and more intense across the world, destroying lives and livelihoods of
millions and often uncounted numbers of people,” Friederike Otto, the
lead of World Weather Attribution and an Imperial College climate
scientist, said during a media briefing on the scientists' findings. “As
long as the world keeps burning fossil fuels, this will only get worse.”
Millions of people endured stifling heat this year. Northern California
and Death Valley baked. Sizzling daytime temperatures scorched Mexico
and Central America. Heat endangered already vulnerable children in West
Africa. Skyrocketing southern European temperatures forced Greece to
close the Acropolis. In South and Southeast Asian countries, heat forced
school closures. Earth experienced some of the hottest days ever
measured and its hottest-yet summer, with a 13-month heat streak that
just barely broke.
To do its heat analysis, the team of volunteer international scientists
compared daily temperatures around the globe in 2024 to the temperatures
that would have been expected in a world without climate change. The
results are not yet peer-reviewed, but researchers use peer-reviewed
methods.
Some areas saw 150 days or more of extreme heat due to climate change.
“The poorest, least developed countries on the planet are the places
that are experiencing even higher numbers,” said Kristina Dahl, vice
president of climate science at Climate Central.
What's worse, heat-related deaths are often underreported.
“People don’t have to die in heat waves. But if we can’t communicate
convincingly, ‘but actually a lot of people are dying,’ it’s much harder
to raise this awareness,” Otto said. “Heat waves are by far the
deadliest extreme event, and they are the extreme events where climate
change is a real game changer.”
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Ricky Leath, an outreach specialist with the City of Miami, talks
with Bei Zhao, right, as he works with the Miami-Dade County
Homeless Trust to distribute bottles of water and other supplies to
the homeless population, helping them manage high temperatures, May
15, 2024, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)
This year was a warning that the
planet is getting dangerously close to the Paris Agreement’s 1.5
degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) warming limit compared to
the pre-industrial average, according to the scientists. Earth is
expected to soon edge past that threshold, although it's not
considered to have been breached until that warming is sustained
over decades.
The researchers closely examined 29 extreme weather events this year
that killed at least 3,700 people and displaced millions, and found
that 26 of them had clear links to climate change.
The El Niño weather pattern, which naturally warms the Pacific Ocean
and changes weather around the world, made some of this weather more
likely earlier in the year. But the researchers said most of their
studies found that climate change played a bigger role than that
phenomenon in fueling 2024's events. Warm ocean waters and warmer
air fueled more destructive storms, according to the researchers,
while temperatures led to many record-breaking downpours.
Jennifer Francis, a climate scientist at the Woodwell Climate
Research Center in Cape Cod who wasn’t involved in the research,
said the science and findings were sound.
“Extreme weather will continue to become more frequent, intense,
destructive, costly, and deadly, until we can lower the
concentration of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere," she said.
Significantly more climate extremes could be expected without
action, the United Nations Environment Programme said in the fall,
as more planet-warming carbon dioxide has been sent into the air
this year by burning fossil fuels than last year.
But the deaths and damages from extreme weather events aren't
inevitable, said Julie Arrighi, director of programmes at the Red
Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre and part of the research.
“Countries can reduce those impacts by preparing for climate change
and adapting for climate change, and while the challenges faced by
individual countries or systems or places vary around the world, we
do see that every country has a role to play," she said.
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