DKT-13-57, updated on 11 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/dkt-13-57
13. Deutsche Klimatagung
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Recent extreme heatwaves dwarfed by projected future events

Philipp Aglas-Leitner1,2,3, Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick4, and Daithi Stone5
Philipp Aglas-Leitner et al.
  • 1Department for Climate Resilience, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Potsdam 601203, Germany
  • 2Institute of Physics and Astronomy, Uni Potsdam, Germany
  • 3University of New South Wales Sydney, Climate Change Research Centre, Sydney, Australia
  • 4University of New South Wales Canberra, School of Science, Canberra, Australia
  • 5National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Niwa, Wellington, New Zealand

In recent decades, unprecedented heatwaves have resulted in substantial impacts on humans and their environment. Previously, heatwave trend analysis has largely focused on trends across global warming thresholds or on specific regions. Furthermore, a variety of diverse heatwave parameters has been applied across separate studies, hampering direct comparison. What is more, there has been limited information on how future projections of individual events compare to recent extreme heatwaves.

In our study, we define heatwaves as periods of at least three consecutive days where daily area-weighted mean temperature exceeds the regional 90th percentile. We utilize a comprehensive analysis framework based on four heatwave parameters and additional sub-parameters where appropriate: (1) heatwave duration in days, (2) heatwave severity, an intensity index enabling interpreting excess heat relative to the regional climatology, (3) cumulative heat, and (4) percentage of locally affected area. The latter is an area-based parameter developed for this study providing information on the exceedance of local (grid cell level) climatology thresholds during the course of an individual heatwave in percent of the respective region’s overall area. This analysis framework greatly increases the ability for individual heatwave-based and regional intercomparison, and, furthermore, explores both regional as well as local scale trends, thereby providing critical impact-oriented information. In addition to daily output from multi-model ensembles from models taking part in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 and 6 and a large initial-condition CanESM5 ensemble, we employ our framework to 14 regional events observed during the period of 2010-2021 and analyzed based on Berkeley Earth and ERA5 reanalysis products. This provides crucial insights into how future heatwaves compare to recent events.

Our results indicate that recently observed extreme heatwaves are dwarfed by projected 21st century events. Moreover, without even moderate reduction in greenhouse gas emissions the probability of reoccurrence or exceedance of these recent extreme reference values is significantly increasing, and they are still plausible under aggressive emission reduction scenarios. These findings stress the necessity for substantial mitigation and for considering heatwaves well outside the lived experience for adaptation strategies.

How to cite: Aglas-Leitner, P., Perkins-Kirkpatrick, S., and Stone, D.: Recent extreme heatwaves dwarfed by projected future events, 13. Deutsche Klimatagung, Potsdam, Deutschland, 12–15 Mar 2024, DKT-13-57, https://doi.org/10.5194/dkt-13-57, 2024.