Open access
Date
2020-05-16Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
In 2018 and 2019, heatwaves set all‐time temperature records around the world and caused adverse effects on human health, agriculture, natural ecosystems, and infrastructure. Often, severe impacts relate to the joint spatial and temporal extent of the heatwaves, but most research so far focuses either on spatial or temporal attributes of heatwaves. Furthermore, sensitivity of heatwaves characteristics to the choice of the heatwave thresholds in a warming climate are rarely discussed. Here, we analyze the largest spatiotemporal moderate heatwaves—that is, three‐dimensional (space‐time) clusters of hot days—in simulations of global climate models. We use three different hazard thresholds to define a hot day: fixed thresholds (time‐invariant climatological thresholds), seasonally moving thresholds based on changes in the summer means, and fully moving thresholds (hot days defined relative to the future climatology). We find a substantial increase of spatiotemporally contiguous moderate heatwaves with global warming using fixed thresholds, whereas changes for the other two hazard thresholds are much less pronounced. In particular, no or very little changes in the overall magnitude, spatial extent, and duration are detected when heatwaves are defined relative to the future climatology using a temporally fully moving threshold. This suggests a dominant contribution of thermodynamic compared to dynamic effects in global climate model simulations. The similarity between seasonally moving and fully moving thresholds indicates that seasonal mean warming alone can explain large parts of the warming of extremes. The strong sensitivity of simulated future heatwaves to hazard thresholds should be considered in the projections of potential future heat‐related impacts.
Plain Language Summary
Heatwaves, such as the worldwide events that occurred in 2018 and 2019, can be associated with substantial impacts on humans, ecosystems, and the economy. These impacts are often caused by the joint temporal and spatial dimensions of the events. However, these properties of the heatwaves are rarely studied jointly. Furthermore, heatwaves are often defined based on exceedance above a fixed threshold, which might overestimate future heatwave impacts in a warming climate. Therefore, we compute here moderate heatwaves considering their true time‐space structure based on three hazard thresholds. We then investigate future changes of these moderate heatwaves for different warming levels. We detect a strong increase in the overall magnitude, spatial extent, and duration of heatwaves if we use fixed hazard thresholds. In the case with seasonally and fully moving hazard thresholds, we find no or only little changes of heatwave characteristics. This strong threshold sensitivity should be considered when estimating impacts associated with future heatwaves in a warming climate. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000415871Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Journal of Geophysical Research: AtmospheresVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
WileySubject
heatwave; adaptation; temperature extremes; climate projections; CMIP5Organisational unit
03777 - Knutti, Reto / Knutti, Reto
03778 - Seneviratne, Sonia / Seneviratne, Sonia
More
Show all metadata