What
is causing Australia's heatwave?
Does
the country's record-breaking heatwave have something to do with
climate change?
21
January, 2013
Australia
has started 2013 with a record-breaking heat wave that has lasted
more than two weeks across many parts of the country. Temperatures
have regularly gone above 48°C, with the highest recorded maximum of
49.6°C at Moomba in South Australia. The extreme conditions have
been associated with a delayed onset of the Australian monsoon, and
slow moving weather systems over the continent.
Australia
has always experienced heat waves, and they are a normal part of most
summers. However, the current event affecting much of inland
Australia has definitely not been typical.
The
most significant thing about the recent heat has been its coverage
across the continent, and its persistence.
It
is very unusual to have such widespread extreme temperatures — and
have them persist for so long. On those two metrics alone, spatial
extent and duration, the last two weeks surpasses the only previous
analogue in the historical record (since 1910) – a two-week
country-wide hot spell during the summer of 1972-1973.
A
good measure of the spatial extent of the heat is the
Australian-averaged maximum daily temperature. This is the average of
the highest daily temperature of the air just above the surface of
the Australian continent, including Tasmania. The national average is
calculated using a three-dimensional interpolation (including
topography) of over 700 observing sites each day.
On
Monday and Tuesday last week (January 7 and 8) that temperature rose
to over 40°C. Monday's temperature of 40.33°C set a new record,
beating the previous highest Australian daily maximum of 40.17°C set
in 1972. Tuesday's temperature came in as the 3rd highest on record
at 40.11°C.
The
accompanying map of temperatures shows just how much of the country
experienced extremely high temperatures, with over 70% of the
continent recording temperatures in excess of 42°C.
Highest
daily maximum temperature during the first two weeks of January.
Source: Australian Bureau of Meteorology
And
it's not like these sorts of days occur that often. The records set
last week sit between two and three standard deviations above the
long-term January mean of 35°C.
Perhaps
more unusually, the Australian mean temperature (representing the
average of the daytime maximum and night-time minimum) set record
high values on both days at 32.22 (January 7) and 32.32°C (January
8), that were well above the previous high of 31.86°C, set in 1972.
However,
it is really the duration of this extreme heat wave that makes it so
unusual, and so significant in terms of impacts.
While
some towns in Australia are famous for their extended runs of hot
temperatures, the limited geographical nature of those events
distinguish them from this January's heat wave. Multiple days of
extreme heat covering most of the continent are both rare, and
isolated.
It
is not that common for the Australian-average temperature to exceed
39°C for even two days in a row. A run of three days above 39°C has
occurred on only three occasions, and a run of four days just once,
in 1972.
The
current heat wave has seen a sequence of Australian temperatures
above 39°C of seven days, and above 38°C of 11 days straight.
The
sequence of Australian mean temperature has been just as impressive.
As things currently stand, the first two weeks of January 2013 now
hold the records for the hottest Australian day on record, the
hottest two-day period on record, the hottest three-day period, the
hottest four-day period and, well, every sequential-days record
stretching from one to 14 days for daily mean temperatures.
The
number of records that have tumbled for individual sites are now too
numerous to catalogue here, and the Bureau of Meteorology has
prepared a Special Climate Statement with a detailed analysis the
temperature records broken. The list of records is limited to just
those stations with at least 30 years of records.
So,
does all this have something to do with climate change?
To
put it in context, we need to look at the influence of background
changes in the climate system.
The
planet is warming, and so is Australia
Planet
Earth is warming up. Climate scientists use a range of different indicators to track global warming. These include ocean heat content,
sea surface temperatures, sea level, temperatures in the lower and
middle troposphere, and the rate of melting glaciers and ice sheets.
The
surface of the earth, as measured by global mean temperature, has
warmed by about one degree Celsius during the past hundred years, and
the decade from 2001 to 2010 has been the warmest we have recorded.
This
warming has been strongly attributed to increasing greenhouse gases
from human activities. While there are a number of influences on the
climate system, such as changing solar radiation and changing atmospheric aerosols, it is very clear that warming has been
dominated by increased carbon dioxide levels.
The
globe doesn't warm uniformly everywhere, due mostly to natural
regional variations in climate. In Australia, land temperatures and
the temperatures of the surrounding oceans have warmed by
approximately 1°C since 1910, fairly close to the global trends.
A
warmer planet means a warmer atmosphere for all our weather and
climate
As
the climate system warms due to increasing greenhouse gases, more
energy is retained in the lower atmosphere. That extra energy
influences all our weather and climate.
Hot
days, hot nights: how much of it is due to global warming? Source:
Richard Riley
In
essence, every weather system and ocean current operates in a climate
system that is now, on average, a degree warmer than a century ago.
In
this way, the impact of global warming is clearly observed in a
distribution shift of daily weather, as well as shifts in monthly and
seasonal climate, to higher temperatures. As is now communicated by
many climate scientists, the warming planet is loading the climate dice in favour of warmer conditions.
So,
while the "cause" of an individual weather event, including
heat waves, is always proximally linked to antecedent weather
conditions — it is possible to determine the influence of climate
change on the frequency of occurrence of such an event. This is
expressed by the increased likelihood that these extreme events will
occur in comparison with the past, or in comparison with climate
modelling scenarios of an unchanging climate.
Even
further, the antecedent weather conditions in the January heat wave
have themselves displayed the influence of a warming world.
The
lead-in climate conditions for this event were four months of very
warm temperatures across Australia. September to December 2012 was
the warmest such period on record (since 1910) for daily maximum
temperatures.
During
November, a precursor of the January heat wave affected many parts of
the country for a prolonged period. It set the highest spring
temperature on record for Victoria (and NSW fell just short of its
record; it couldn't beat the extreme heat that occurred in 2009). In
this context, the recent heat wave is little more than an extension
of a record hot four months for Australia, made worse because it is
mid-summer.
We're
seeing more record-breaking heat events than cold events
A
relatively small change in the average temperature can easily double
the frequency of extreme heat events. Australia has warmed steadily
since the 1940s, and the probability of extreme heat has now
increased almost five-fold compared with 50 years ago.
Within
the past decade, the number of extreme heat records in Australia has
outnumbered extreme cold records by almost 3:1 for daytime maximum
temperatures and 5:1 for night-time minimum temperature.
More
than 70% of Australia has been very hot. Source: AAP Image/Damian
Shaw
The
duration of heat waves has increased in some parts, especially in the
northern half of the continent. Put another way, the frequency of
abnormally hot days (above the 90th percentile) has increased by 30%
and the frequency of hot nights (above the 90th percentile) has
increased by 50%.
It
is worth noting the summer just gone in the US was the warmest on
record, with extreme heat records broken at a rate never previously
seen before. Studies here and overseas are now showing that many of
the recent extreme summer heat events around the world — such as
the European heat wave of 2003, the Russian heat wave of 2010, and US
heat waves during 2011 and 2012 — would have been very, very
unlikely without the influence of global warming.
Global
warming is not only warming summer but also broadening the
summer-like period of the year, creating the perfect set-up for
record extreme heat.
Of
great concern in Australia is the substantial increasing trend in
severe fire weather — weather conducive to the spread and
intensification of bushfires and grass fires — in about half of the
monitoring sites studied around the country, with a concentrated
increase in the southeast of the continent. The fire season is now
longer, reducing the time for preparation such as fuel reduction.
Again
this is not surprising, and has been predicted in advance — the
combined impact of warming and cool season drying is increasing the
fire danger in a region already highly fire prone.
We
expect extreme warm weather events will occur more often
Future
warming of the climate due to greenhouse gas emissions will very
likely lead to further increases in the frequency of unusually hot
days and nights and continued declines in unusually cold days and
nights.
These
changes will result in weather events which are increasingly beyond
our prior experiences.
And
it's not just temperature extremes. Climate model projections
indicate that the frequency of many different types of extreme
weather will change as the planet warms.
This article first appeared in the Conversation
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