One way to measure a heatwave is by how much temperatures have exceeded normal conditions.
By that metric, the heatwave in the Pacific Northwest has essentially tied, or possible even exceeded, the most severe summer heatwave ever observed anywhere in North America.
The previous graphic also helps to clarify why it is so shocking to have been seeing these weather models forecast temperatures +36 °F (+20 °C) above normal.
Historically, that essentially never happens, anywhere in North America during the summer months.
Yesterday, Portland International Airport reported 112 °F (44.4 °C) far exceeding any historical precedent.
That would be like Dallas reaching 130 °F (54 °C) or Madrid at 120 °F (49 °C).
Today, Portland is forecast to be even hotter at 114 °F (45.5 °C).
I estimate that Portland International Airport reaching 112 °F (44.4 °C) is roughly 4.3 standard deviations above the historical mean.
Historically, we'd expect a deviation that large to happen on roughly one day out of every 350 years.
But things aren't the same as anymore.
Climate change is loading the dice.
By adding a few degrees of warmth to the climate, historically improbable events are suddenly occurring with alarming frequency.
So far, global mean temperature has risen about 2.3 °F (1.3 °C).
However, we've already added about 3.2 °F (1.8 °C) to the average land temperature, which is where most of us happen to live.
Temperatures on Earth will continue to rise, until humanity greatly reduces its emissions of greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide.
Climate is changing, because we are changing the atmosphere.
Lastly, it is important to realize that there is essentially no going back.
If humanity eventually manages to stop emitting greenhouse gases, then we will stabilize the climate.
However, whatever warming the Earth has gained by then will persist for many human lifetimes.
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In case anyone is wondering, about 1/2 of the 150 million tonnes of water vapor injected into the stratosphere by the extremely violent Hunga Tonga eruption (January 2022) is still there.
A fascinating natural experiment for upper atmospheric chemistry and dynamics.
🧵
After the initial plume settled at ~25 km altitude, the water vapor has mostly migrated to higher levels.
Ordinarily, the tropopause (~12-15 km high) greatly limits water vapor from reaching the stratosphere, so the stratosphere is very dry (only a few ppm of water).
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The water vapor plume began at the location of Hunga Tonga (~20° S latitude), but subsequent dynamics carried most of the water vapor higher and towards both poles.
Before I begin, I should note that I am one of the 11 coauthors on this new paper. My contributions are actually fairly modest, and Sebastian and others deserve the lion's share of the credit for developing this work over more than 2 years.
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This story of scientific discovery begins, as so many do, by noticing a small discrepancy in the data.
Through most of the last 170 years, the land measurements and ocean measurements show a similar pattern of global warming, but not in the early 20th century.
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So, what does the re-election of Donald Trump mean for climate change?
We can make some educated guesses based on his first term, his campaign, and the expressed wishes of his allies.
A few of my thoughts as a thread. 🧵
Firstly, a Trump administration obviously means abandoning any leadership role in the global fight against climate change.
He has promised to re-withdraw from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, and possibly the UNFCCC as well.
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Having the USA – world's second largest annual carbon dioxide emitter – withdraw from the international process is obviously not a good thing, and will greatly undermine calls for further ambition on countering climate change.
For a few, climate change will arrive with life-altering violence. But for many, the early consequences of climate change will be more subtle and pernicious.
In a word: Inflation.
Let me explain...
As weather patterns change, a few will suffer greatly, but many will share some of the financial costs incurred.
Lost crops -> Higher food costs
Damaged homes -> Higher home insurance costs
Damaged infrastructure -> Higher taxes
Etc.
Money spent defending against climate-fueled disasters, or recovering from their damages, is money that we won't have to spend on other things.
In its initial stages, climate change adds an extra burden chipping away at our prosperity.
It was the first year that any of the major temperature analysis groups exceeded 1.5 °C above their "preindustrial" 1850-1900 average, thus touching the Paris Agreement limit.
Under the Paris Agreement on Climate Change countries agreed to "pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels".
The exact definition of how that would be measured is intentionally vaguely, but most agree it refers to a multi-year average.
A single year above 1.5°C won't, by itself, be a breach of the limit, as the focus is on the long-term average.
However, reaching 1.5 °C for the first time shows how little time remains.
The Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai eruption was unusually water rich (& sulfur poor), injecting ~150 million tonnes of water into the stratosphere, increasing global upper atmosphere water mass by ~15%.
As a powerful greenhouse gas, this water may have contributed to recent warming.
Water is much more abundant in the lower atmosphere but has difficulty crossing the tropopause (12-20 km) due to the very low temperatures.
The Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai eruption burst through in early 2022 and has since spread through the upper atmosphere.
In the months immediately following the Hunga Tonga–Hunga Haʻapai eruption, the extra water was most concentrated in the Southern mid-latitudes, near the volcano, but has since spread to both hemispheres.