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Severe heatwaves putting lakes in hot water by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Feb 25, 2022
According to a new study, the world's largest lakes are being hit by severe heatwaves six times as frequently as they were around two decades ago. Using data from ESA's Climate Change Initiative, the study states that severe lake heatwaves are twice as likely to occur on average, compared to a pre-industrial climate. Published in the AGU journal Geophysical Research Letters, the study is one of the first to quantify how anthropogenic climate change has influenced lake heatwaves - offering a new perspective on just one of the ways lakes are responding to the warming climate. The researchers found that severe and extreme heatwaves may be three times more likely at 1.5 C of global warming, which is the goal set under the Paris Agreement. Under a 3 C global warming scenario, the most extreme warming scenario, heatwaves could be up to 25 times more likely by the end of the century. The researchers also found that the anthropogenic contribution was also higher in tropical lakes, mirroring other studies that have found lower-latitude regions bear the brunt of climate change impacts. Iestyn Woolway, lead author of the study and former research fellow at ESA's Climate Office, commented, "What really stood out was the magnitude of human contribution: Most of the severe lake heatwaves we looked at had a significant anthropogenic imprint. And looking at how these heatwaves will change in the future, the magnitude of change we expect to see in the coming decades was quite striking." The new study uses lake surface temperature data from ESA's Climate Change Initiative Lake project which includes data collected by the European Remote Sensing satellite (ERS-2) and Envisat. From 1000 lakes selected around the world, the team carefully picked out visible lakes that were large enough to sample temperatures from multiple points. This left 78 large lakes worldwide, including Lake Baikal, Lake Victoria and Lake Erie, with enough data from 1995 to 2019 for them to analyse. The researchers paired the historical data with climate models from the Intersectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project to estimate how much human climate change has contributed to the lake heatwaves, and to predict how frequently they will occur over the next century. Woolway concluded: "The only way to deal with this is to reduce global warming. If temperatures continue to increase, lake heatwaves will get progressively worse." Clement Albergel, Climate Applications Scientist at ESA, commented, "Satellite observations allow for a regional to global assessment of lake responses to a changing environment and the impacts of human-kind. The long-term and consistent records developed by ESA's Climate Initiative provide the empirical record to support climate science and inform effective climate action to address and build resilience to the negative consequences of change." The study is available by clicking on the following link: Severe lake heatwaves attributable to human-induced global warming
Research Report: "Severe Lake Heatwaves Attributable to Human-Induced Global Warming"
California sizzles in February heatwave Los Angeles (AFP) Feb 10, 2022 A heatwave was bringing unseasonably high temperatures to California on Thursday, sending sun-worshippers to the beach, but also sparking a brushfire. Forecasters issued a heat warning for the most populous US state through to Sunday, warning the mercury could hit a height-of-summer 90 Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) in Los Angeles, well above the average for winter. California, in common with much of the western United States, is enduring a historic drought and wild swings in weather that scientists sa ... read more
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