This
article has pride of place in the Guardian today and addresses
wet-bulb temperature.
Media
articles seem to be of two types
- ‘Faster than previously thought’
- MAY happen (far) into the future if emissions are not cut at Paris (or some unspecified time in the future).
This
falls into the second category.
Extreme
heatwaves could push Gulf climate beyond human endurance, study shows
Oil
heartlands of Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha and Iran’s coast will
experience higher temperatures and humidity than ever before on Earth
if the world fails to cut carbon emissions
26
October, 2015
The
Gulf in the Middle East, the heartland of the global oil industry,
will suffer heatwaves beyond the limit of human survival if climate
change is unchecked, according to a new scientific study.
The
extreme heatwaves will affect Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha and coastal
cities in Iran as well as posing a deadly threat to millions of Hajj
pilgrims in Saudi
Arabia,
when the religious festival falls in the summer. The study shows the
extreme heatwaves, more intense than anything ever experienced on
Earth, would kick in after 2070 and that the hottest days of today
would by then be a near-daily occurrence.
“Our
results expose a specific regional hotspot where climate change, in
the absence of significant [carbon cuts], is likely to severely
impact human habitability in the future,” said Prof Jeremy Pal and
Prof Elfatih Eltahir, both at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, writing
in the journal Nature Climate Change.
They
said the future climate for many locations in the Gulf would be like
today’s extreme climate in the desert of Northern
Afar,
on the African side of the Red Sea, where there are no permanent
human settlements at all. But the research also showed that cutting
greenhouse gas emissions now could avoid this fate.
Oil
and gas rich nations in the region, particularly Saudi Arabia, have
frequently tried to frustrate
international climate change negotiations.
The Gulf, where populations are rising quickly, was hit in 2015 by
one of its worst-ever
heatwaves,
where temperatures topped 50C (122F) and led to a significant number
of deaths.
Prof
Eltahir said: “We would hope that information like this would be
helpful in making sure there is interest [in cutting carbon
emissions] for the countries in the region. They have a vital
interest in supporting measures that would help reduce the
concentration of CO2 in the future.”
The
new research examined how a combined measure of temperature and
humidity, called wet
bulb temperature (WBT),
would increase if carbon emissions continue on current trends and the
world warms by 4C this century.
At
WBTs above 35C, the high heat and humidity make it physically
impossible for even the fittest human body to cool itself by
sweating, with fatal consequences after six hours. For less fit
people, the fatal WBT is below 35C. A WBT temperature of 35C – the
combination of 46C heat and 50% humidity – was almost reached
in Bandar
Mahshahr in Iran in
July 2015.
The
scientists used standard climate computer models to show that the
fatal WBT extremes would occur every decade or two after 2070 along
most of the Gulf coast, if global warming is not curbed. Using the
normal measure of temperature, the study shows 45C would become the
usual summer maximum in Gulf cities, with 60C being seen in places
like Kuwait City in some years.
Near
the Red Sea coast of Saudi Arabia, where Mecca and Jeddah lie, the
WBT is not projected to pass the fatal 35C level, but would be 32C or
33C. This would make the Hajj extremely hazardous, said the
scientists. “One of the rituals of Hajj – the day of Arafah –
involves worshipping at the site outside Mecca from sunrise to
sunset. In these kind of conditions, it would be very hard to have
outside rituals,” said Eltahir.
Air
conditioning might be able to protect people indoors and those in
wealthy Gulf oil states might be able to afford it, said the
scientists, but less wealthy nations would suffer. In Yemen, for
example, the WBT would reach 33C. “Under such conditions, climate
change would possibly lead to premature death of the weakest –
namely children and the elderly,” they said.
However, global
action to cut carbon emissions would
mean the fatal WBT would not be passed and that temperatures in Saudi
Arabia would experience much smaller rises. “The [Gulf] countries
stand to gain considerable benefits by supporting the global efforts”
to cut emissions, said the scientists.
“The
consequences of major heatwaves for human health has become apparent
from the death toll of recent events such as those in Chicago in
1995, Europe
in 2003 [30,000
deaths] and Russia
in 2010 [50,000
deaths],” said climate scientist Prof Christoph Schär, at ETH
Zurich, Switzerland and who was not involved in the study. But he
said the new study “concerns another category of heat waves – one
that may be fatal to everybody affected, even young and fit
individuals under shaded and well-ventilated outdoor conditions.”
Schär
said the work showed the threat to human health from climate change
may be much more severe, and occur much earlier, than previously
thought. “It also indicates that reducing global greenhouse gas
emissions and adaptation efforts are essential for the inhabitants of
the Gulf and Red Sea regions.”
The
Gulf is vulnerable to very high WBT because regional weather patterns
mean it has clear summer skies, allowing the sun to strongly warm the
waters of the Gulf, which are shallow and therefore heat up more than
deeper oceans. This heating of the sea also produces high humidity,
meaning cities near the coast are most affected.
What’s it like living in today’s Gulf heatwaves
Summer
meant going back to my birthplace in Alexandria in Egypt, but it also
meant getting away from temperatures that could hit a hellish 50C,
when going to the beach wasn’t an option, unless you enjoyed
scorching your soles in the sand to swim in tepid seawater while
burning your skin in the blazing sun.
Summer
is something you work around in the Gulf. You try to ensure your time
spent outside is kept to a minimum because the high humidity of
seaside cities, such as Dubai, will leave your clothes soaking wet
within minutes. It means an intricate hop from air-conditioned site
to air-conditioned site – your apartment to your car to the
supermarket or the shopping mall or a friend’s similarly
temperature-controlled abode. It means never having to use a water
heater because your shower will always be hot – even scaldingly so
if you dare to take one at midday.
Now
that the holy month of Ramadan falls in the summer, whenever I’m
back visiting family I try to keep daytime waking hours, when I have
to abstain from drinking water, to a bare minimum. I’ve completed
the hajj and the lesser pilgrimage, the umra – the former in the
cool February climate and the latter in the heat of summer. I cannot
imagine handling the crush of millions of pilgrims marching around
the ka’aba in the Grand Mosque during a heatwave.
The
summer can be insufferable in other places in the region for
different reasons. While this year it was relatively mild in Beirut,
where I live now, for example, it is always accompanied by water
shortages and extended power cuts for days on end, leaving you with
little choice but to pay for an expensive generator subscription to
preserve perishables such as meat or dairy for more than a day, or
sleeping on the ceramic tiles to cool off. This year it was also
accompanied by piles of rotting trash baking in the sun after the
government’s chronic failures were extended to garbage collection.
This
isn’t a problem in the Gulf, where save for a freak power cut the
constant electricity supply maintains a climate-controlled habitat. I
was a bit incredulous when Qatar was awarded the World Cup hosting
rights – I hadn’t been able to play football outside of an
air-conditioned indoor pitch in the summer since God knows how
long.
Kareem Shaheen in Beirut
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