Scorching Global Temps Astound Climate Scientists
As
wildfire rages in California, flooding affects millions in India and
China, and eggs are fried on sidewalks in Iraq, scientists say global
climate catastrophe is surpassing predictions
Southern
California's years-long drought has resulted in one of the "most
extreme" wildfires the region has ever seen. (Photo: Nick Ut/AP)
27 July, 2016
Record
global heat in
the first half of 2016 has caught climate scientists
off-guard, reports Thompson
Reuters Foundation.
"What
concerns me most is that we didn't anticipate these temperature
jumps," David Carlson, director of the World Meteorological
Organization's (WMO) climate research program, told Thompson
Reuters Foundation late
Monday. "We predicted moderate warmth for 2016, but nothing like
the temperature rises we've seen."
"Massive
temperature hikes, but also extreme events like floodings, have
become the new normal," Carlson added. "The ice melt rates
recorded in the first half of 2016, for example—we don't usually
see those until later in the year."
Indeed,
extreme weather events are currently wreaking havoc around the world.
In
Southern California, firefighters are battling one of the "most
extreme"
fires the region has ever seen. The so-called sand
fire had
consumed 38,346 acres as of Wednesday morning and forced the
evacuations of 10,000 homes, and one person has died.
Meteorologist
Eric Holthaus reported on
the unusual fire last Friday in Pacific
Standard:
The fire, which started as a small brush fire along the side of Highway 14 near Santa Clarita, California, on Friday, quickly spread out of control under weather conditions that were nearly ideal for explosive growth. The fire doubled in size overnight on Friday, and then doubled again during the day on Saturday.
"The fire behavior was some of the most extreme I've seen in the Los Angeles area in my career," says Stuart Palley, a wildfire photographer based in Southern California. "The fire was running all over the place. … It was incredible to see." There were multiple reports of flames 50 to 100 feet high on Saturday, which is unusual for fires in the region.
Time-lapse
footage filmed on July 23 showed the fire's tall flames and rapid
growth:
"Since
late 2011," Holthaus explained, "Los Angeles County has
missed out on about
three years' worth of
rain. Simply put: Extreme weather and climate conditions have helped
produce this fire's extreme behavior."
The
fire is an omen of things to come, according to Holthaus: "Even
if rainfall amounts don't change in the future, drought and wildfire
severity likely will because
warmer temperatures are more efficient at evaporating what little
moisture does fall. That, according to scientists, means California's
risk of a mega-drought — spanning
decades or more — is, or will be soon, the highest it's been in
millennia."
As
University of California professor Anthony LeRoy
Westerling wrote Tuesday
in theGuardian:
"A changing climate is transforming our landscape, and fire is
one of the tools it uses. Expect to see more of it, in more places,
as temperatures rise."
Meanwhile,
in India's northeast, Reuters reported Tuesday
that over 1.2 million people "have been hit by floods which have
submerged hundreds of villages, inundated large swathes of farmland
and damaged roads, bridges and telecommunications services, local
authorities said on Tuesday."
"Incessant
monsoon rains in the tea and oil-rich state of Assam have forced the
burgeoning Brahmaputra river and its tributaries to burst their
banks—affecting more than half of the region's 32 districts,"
the wire service reported.
Local
officials also told the media that "more than 60 percent of
region's famed Kaziranga National Park, home to two-thirds of the
world's endangered one-horned rhinoceroses, is also under water,
leaving the animals more vulnerable to poaching."
An
unusually heavy monsoon season has also devastated communities in
northern China,AFP reported Monday,
with nearly 300 dead or missing and hundreds of thousands displaced
after catastrophic flooding hit the region.
And
in Iraq, temperatures last week reached such
unprecedented heights that a chef literally fried an egg on the
sidewalk.
Stateside,
the heat
dome continues
to inflict scorching summer temperatures across the country. In one
Arizona locale, for example, meteorologists are predicting a
scorching high temperature on Wednesday of 114° Fahrenheit. One
Arizona resident posted a videoTuesday
desperately asking people to pray for the state as it faces more hot
weather. "It is still six billion degrees," the resident
lamented. "Lord, we need you."
Yet
there appears to be little relief in sight: for the first time
ever, USA
Today reportedTuesday,
the U.S. federal government's climate prediction center is
forecasting hotter-than-normal temperatures for the next three months
for "every square inch" of the country.
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