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Heatwave attribution based on reliable operational weather forecasts

Summary/Abstract

The 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave was so extreme as to challenge conventional statistical and climate-model-based approaches to extreme weather attribution. However, state-of-the-art operational weather prediction systems are demonstrably able to simulate the detailed physics of the heatwave. In this peer-reviewed study, the authors leverage these systems to show that human influence on the climate made this event at least 8 [2–50] times more likely. At the current rate of global warming, the likelihood of such an event is doubling every 20 [10–50] years. The authors argue that, given the multi-decade lower-bound return-time implied by the length of the historical record, this rate of change in likelihood is highly relevant for decision makers. Further, forecast-based attribution can synthesise the conditional event-specific storyline and unconditional event-class probabilistic approaches to attribution. If developed as a routine service in forecasting centres, it could provide reliable estimates of human influence on extreme weather risk, which is critical to supporting effective adaptation planning.

Leach, N.J., Roberts, C.D., Aengenheyster, M. et al. Heatwave attribution based on reliable operational weather forecasts. Nat Commun 15, 4530 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48280-7

View Resource
May 2024
Nicholas J. Leach, Christopher D. Roberts, Matthias Aengenheyster, Daniel Heathcote, Dann M. Mitchell, Vikki Thompson, Tim Palmer, Antje Weisheimer, Myles R. Allen
Nature Communications
Peer-reviewed Study
Northwest United States
Extreme Event Attribution
Extreme Event Attribution → Cross-cutting Research
Extreme Event Attribution → Extreme Heat

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