Extreme Weather Events
Climate Change
Post-Doctoral Fellowships
United Kingdom
Is the Ocean to Blame for Extreme Heat Waves?
The oceans’ influence should not be underestimated: they store 1,000 times more heat than the atmosphere and large-scale circulation patterns transport it around the planet. Northwest Europe would become considerably colder if climate change caused these ocean currents, carrying heat northward from the equator, to slow. Using data from the RAPID array, a series of sensors spanning the Atlantic from Morocco to Florida, Aurélie Duchez and her team showed that a 30% slowdown of circulation in the North Atlantic did, in fact, precede the extremely cold European winters of 2009-10 and 2010-11. Then, in the first study of its kind, they have established the role of anomalously cold North Atlantic Ocean temperatures as a precursor to the highest temperatures ever recorded in Central Europe during the summer of 2015. Since the 1980s, the appearance of the same exceptional cold patch has preceded several extreme heat waves. This points to “a previously unknown role of the Atlantic Ocean as a driver for these devastating events,” she explains. Next, she will work on understanding how, specifically, this oceanic phenomenon might lead to such intense hot spells.
Understanding the mechanisms that link oceanic conditions to extreme climate events—which are expected to increase with climate change—would reveal if the latter can be predicted. This knowledge could yield improved forecasting of severe weather and sufficient lead-time for governments, health services, insurers and citizens to prepare.
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Aurelie
DUCHEZ
Institution
National Oceanography Centre
Country
United Kingdom
Nationality
French
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