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Heatwaves: What you need to know

By AFP - Sep 03,2022 - Last updated at Sep 03,2022

AFP photo

LOS ANGELES — A blistering heat wave is baking the western United States, the latest to blast the northern hemisphere in a summer that has brought extreme temperatures across Europe, Asia and North America.

Climatologists say the kiln-like conditions in California, Nevada and Arizona are caused by a heat dome — a huge bubble of stationary high pressure that is trapping ever-hotter air.

And, they say, human-caused climate change is making these oppressive Heatwaves worse — hotter, longer and more frequent.

Here’s what you need to know about Heatwaves.

 

What is a heat wave?

 

Anyone suffering through sultry nights and sweltering days knows they’re in a heat wave, but there are a few technical definitions.

The one the US government chooses is: At least two consecutive days when the minimum temperature for the area is hotter than 85 per cent of July and August days in the same area, based on historical averages.

That minimum usually comes at night, which is important — after a very hot day, our bodies tend to cool off at night. But if the temperature remains elevated, that’s much harder. This is when people get ill.

It’s also important to localise the definition. People accustomed to 29ºC days are likely not fazed by 32 degrees. But if you live in a chilly, damp spot and the mercury hits 32, you’ll find it much harder to cope.

 

What causes Heatwaves?

 

Generally it’s an area of high pressure that parks itself in one spot, forming a heat dome — imagine a huge greenhouse that lets in the sun’s heat, but won’t let any air flow through.

The high pressure prevents clouds from forming as it pushes air downwards, compressing and heating the air — think of how a tire gets hot as you pump more air in.

Jet streams — air that flows high in the Earth’s atmosphere — usually move pressure systems around the planet.

But they can meander. As the waves of a jet stream widen, they slow and can even stop. This is what leaves a ridge of high pressure in one place.

 

Are Heatwaves dangerous?

 

Yes, very. More people die from the heat every year in the United States than from any other extreme weather, including floods, tornadoes, and cold snaps, according to government figures.

A ferocious heat wave in Spain and Portugal in July left more than 1,700 people dead.

And hundreds died last year when a heat wave frazzled Canada and the western US, with temperatures of up to 49ºC.

When it’s very hot, our bodies find it more difficult to keep cool, which can result in a “cascade of illnesses”, according to the World Health Organisation.

These include heat cramps, heat exhaustion, heatstroke and hyperthermia.

“Deaths and hospitalisations from heat can occur extremely rapidly [same day], or have a lagged effect [several days later] and result in accelerating death or illness in the already frail,” the WHO says.

That means anyone who already suffers from problems with their heart or respiratory system is particularly at risk.

The effects of intense heat are not evenly felt across societies, and tend to be more acute in poorer, and more marginalised communities. 

Homeless people or those who work outside during the heat of the day are obviously at risk, but so are people living in neighbourhoods without tree cover, or near to sources of pollution like roads.

What is climate 

change doing?

 

Like all weather phenomena, climate change is super-charging Heatwaves.

Human activity, specifically the burning of fossil fuels, has warmed the Earth by an average of around 1.2ºC since pre-industrial times. Much of this warming has happened in the last 50 years.

US government data shows Heatwaves worsening in concert with a warming planet: Every decade since the 1960s they have got longer, hotter and more frequent.

“Their frequency has increased steadily, from an average of two Heatwaves per year during the 1960s to six per year during the 2010s and 2020s,” the Environmental Protection Agency says.

“In recent years, the average heat wave in major US urban areas has been about four days long. This is about a day longer than the average heat wave in the 1960s.”

A study after last year’s record-breaking heat wave in Canada found it would have been “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate change.

The World Weather Attribution group said that global warming, caused by greenhouse gas emissions, made the heat wave at least 150 times more likely to happen.

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