Heat extremes in Western Europe increasing faster than simulated due to atmospheric circulation trends

Author:

Vautard RobertORCID,Cattiaux Julien,Happé TamaraORCID,Singh Jitendra,Bonnet RémyORCID,Cassou ChristopheORCID,Coumou DimORCID,D’Andrea Fabio,Faranda DavideORCID,Fischer ErichORCID,Ribes AurélienORCID,Sippel SebastianORCID,Yiou PascalORCID

Abstract

AbstractOver the last 70 years, extreme heat has been increasing at a disproportionate rate in Western Europe, compared to climate model simulations. This mismatch is not well understood. Here, we show that a substantial fraction (0.8 °C [0.2°−1.4 °C] of 3.4 °C per global warming degree) of the heat extremes trend is induced by atmospheric circulation changes, through more frequent southerly flows over Western Europe. In the 170 available simulations from 32 different models that we analyzed, including 3 large model ensembles, none have a circulation-induced heat trend as large as observed. This can be due to underestimated circulation response to external forcing, or to a systematic underestimation of low-frequency variability, or both. The former implies that future projections are too conservative, the latter that we are left with deep uncertainty regarding the pace of future summer heat in Europe. This calls for caution when interpreting climate projections of heat extremes over Western Europe, in view of adaptation to heat waves.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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