• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Climate Attribution

  • Home
  • Search
    • Climate Change Attribution
    • Extreme Event Attribution
    • Impact Attribution
    • Source Attribution
    • Court Attribution
  • About
    • Contact
    • Sitemap
  • Related Resources
    • Conference – January 9-10, 2025
  • Subscribe

Without human-caused climate change temperatures of 40oC in the UK would have been extremely unlikely

Summary/Abstract

● The 2022 heatwave is estimated to have led to at least 13 from drowning, it brought challenging conditions for the NHS with a spike in emergency calls, and care services supporting the elderly and vulnerable were put under increased stress, with a likely increase in heat related deaths. The impacts were unequally distributed across demographics. Even within London, there are high levels of inequity in experienced temperatures, with certain, often poorer neighbourhoods, lacking green space, shade, and water which can be lifelines during heatwave.
● While Europe experiences heatwaves increasingly frequently over the last years, the recently observed heat in the UK has been so extreme that it is also a rare event in today’s climate. The observed temperatures averaged over 2 days were estimated to have a return period of approx. 100 years in the current climate. For the 1-day maximum temperatures over the region shown in Fig. 1 the return time is estimated at 1 in 1000 years in the current climate. Note that return periods of temperatures vary between different measures and locations, and are therefore highly uncertain.
● At three individual stations the 1-day maximum temperatures are as rare as 1 in 500 years in St James Park in London, about 1 in 1000 years in Durham and only expected on average once in 1500 years in today’s climate in Cranwell, Lincolnshire.
● The likelihood of observing such an event in a 1.2C cooler world is extremely low, and statistically impossible in two out of the three analysed stations.
● The observational analysis shows that a UK heatwave as defined above would be about 4C cooler in preindustrial times.
● To estimate how much of these observed changes is attributable to human-caused climate change we combine climate models with the observations. It is important to highlight that all models systematically underestimate the observed trends. The combined results are thus almost certainly too conservative.
● Combining the results based on observational and model analysis, we find that, for both event definitions, human-caused climate change made the event at least 10 times more likely. In the models, the same event would be about 2C less hot in a 1.2C cooler world, which is a much smaller change in intensity than observed.
● This discrepancies between the modelled and observed trends and variability also hinders confidence in projections of the future trends.
● Heatwaves during the height of summer pose a substantial risk to human health and are potentially lethal. This risk is aggravated by climate change, but also by other factors such as an ageing population, urbanisation, changing social structures, and levels of preparedness. The full impact is only known after a few weeks when the mortality figures have been analysed. Effective heat emergency plans, together with accurate weather forecasts such as those issued before this heatwave, reduce impacts and are becoming even more important in light of the rising risk

Mariam Zachariah et al., Without human-caused climate change temperatures of 40oC in the UK would have been extremely unlikely, World Weather Attribution (July 28, 2022)

View Resource
July 2022
Mariam Zachariah, Robert Vautard, Dominik L. Schumacher, Maja Vahlberg, Dorothy Heinrich, Emmanuel Raju, Lisa Thalheimer, Julie Arrighi, Roop Singh, Sihan Li, Jingru Sun, Gabriel Vecchi, Wenchang Yang, Sonia I. Seneviratne, Simon F. B. Tett, Luke J. Harrington, Piotr Wolski, Fraser C. Lott, Mark McCarthy, Jordis S. Tradowsky, Friederike E. L. Otto
World Weather Attribution
Real-time Study
United Kingdom
Extreme Event Attribution → Extreme Heat

Footer

This website provides educational information. It does not, nor is it intended to, provide legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is established by use of this site. Consult with an attorney for any needed legal advice. There is no warranty of accuracy, adequacy or comprehensiveness. Those who use information from this website do so at their own risk.

© 2026 Sabin Center for Climate Change Law
Made with by Satellite Jones