AFP: Temperatures in Britain could exceed 40 degrees Celsius every three or four years by 2100 if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated, research published Tuesday has found, as climate change increases the likelihood of scorching heat waves.
The modelling study by Britain’s Meteorological Office found that emissions are dramatically increasing the likelihood of extremely warm days in the UK, particularly in the southeast.
Without climate change, a summer in which the mercury went above 40 Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) somewhere in the UK would be expected around once in hundreds, or even thousands of years, the researchers found.
But sweltering 40C days have already become more likely with global warming, and are currently estimated to occur every 100 to 300 years, they reported in the journal Nature Communications.
If the present high rates of greenhouse gas emissions continue, these extremes could occur every three to four years by 2100, the study concluded.
Even under a mid-range emissions scenario, they could still happen around every 15 years.
Lead author Nikolaos Christidis said the rate of change in the expected frequency of these high temperatures was “remarkable”.
“Exceeding extreme temperature thresholds like the 40C in the UK would be accompanied by severe impacts — on public health, transport infrastructure,” he told AFP, adding that a key motivation for the study was to help build the country’s resilience to such events.
– Temperature extremes –
Last year the highest ever UK temperature, 38.7C, was recorded in the eastern city of Cambridge.
In 2018 the sizzling UK summer temperature was estimated to have become 30 times more likely due to man-made climate change.
“Our paper shows that the likelihood of hitting 40C is rapidly increasing,” Christidis said.