This summer is 'what global warming looks like'

Homes are destroyed by the Waldo Canyon fire in the Mountain Shadows area of Colorado Springs, Colo., on Tuesday, June 26, 2012.  A stubborn and towering wildfire jumped firefighters' perimeter lines in the hills overlooking Colorado Springs, forcing frantic mandatory evacuation notices for more than 9,000 residents. (AP Photo/The Gazette,Jerilee Bennett)

Homes are destroyed by the Waldo Canyon fire in the Mountain Shadows area of Colorado Springs, Colo., on Tuesday, June 26, 2012. A stubborn and towering wildfire jumped firefighters' perimeter lines in the hills overlooking Colorado Springs, forcing frantic mandatory evacuation notices for more than 9,000 residents. (AP Photo/The Gazette,Jerilee Bennett)

WASHINGTON — Is it just freakish weather or something more? Climate scientists suggest that if you want a glimpse of some of the worst of global warming, take a look at U.S. weather in recent weeks.

Horrendous wildfires. Oppressive heat waves. Devastating droughts. Flooding from giant deluges. And a powerful freak wind storm called a derecho.

These are the kinds of extremes experts have predicted will come with climate change, although it's far too early to say that is the cause. Nor will they say global warming is the reason 3,215 daily high temperature records were set in the month of June.

Scientifically linking individual weather events to climate change takes intensive study, complicated mathematics, computer models and lots of time. Sometimes it isn't caused by global warming. Weather is always variable; freak things happen.

And this weather has been local. Europe, Asia and Africa aren't having similar disasters now, although they've had their own extreme events in recent years.

But since at least 1988, climate scientists have warned that climate change would bring, in general, increased heat waves, more droughts, more sudden downpours, more widespread wildfires and worsening storms. In the United States, those extremes are happening here and now.

So far this year, more than 2.1 million acres have burned in wildfires, more than 113 million people in the U.S. were in areas under extreme heat advisories last Friday, two-thirds of the country is experiencing drought, and earlier in June, deluges flooded Minnesota and Florida.

"This is what global warming looks like at the regional or personal level," said Jonathan Overpeck, professor of geosciences and atmospheric sciences at the University of Arizona. "The extra heat increases the odds of worse heat waves, droughts, storms and wildfire. This is certainly what I and many other climate scientists have been warning about."

Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in fire-charred Colorado, said these are the very record-breaking conditions he has said would happen, but many people wouldn't listen. So it's I told-you-so time, he said.

As recently as March, a special report an extreme events and disasters by the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned of "unprecedented extreme weather and climate events." Its lead author, Chris Field of the Carnegie Institution and Stanford University, said Monday, "It's really dramatic how many of the patterns that we've talked about as the expression of the extremes are hitting the U.S. right now."

"What we're seeing really is a window into what global warming really looks like," said Princeton University geosciences and international affairs professor Michael Oppenheimer. "It looks like heat. It looks like fires. It looks like this kind of environmental disasters."

Oppenheimer said that on Thursday. That was before the East Coast was hit with triple-digit temperatures and before a derecho — a large, powerful and long-lasting straight-line wind storm — blew from Chicago to Washington. The storm and its aftermath killed more than 20 people and left millions without electricity. Experts say it had energy readings five times that of normal thunderstorms.

Fueled by the record high heat, this was among the strongest of this type of storm in the region in recent history, said research meteorologist Harold Brooks of the National Severe Storm Laboratory in Norman, Okla. Scientists expect "non-tornadic wind events" like this one and other thunderstorms to increase with climate change because of the heat and instability, he said.

Such patterns haven't happened only in the past week or two. The spring and winter in the U.S. were the warmest on record and among the least snowy, setting the stage for the weather extremes to come, scientists say.

Since Jan. 1, the United States has set more than 40,000 hot temperature records, but fewer than 6,000 cold temperature records, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Through most of last century, the U.S. used to set cold and hot records evenly, but in the first decade of this century America set two hot records for every cold one, said Jerry Meehl, a climate extreme expert at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. This year the ratio is about 7 hot to 1 cold. Some computer models say that ratio will hit 20-to-1 by midcentury, Meehl said.

"In the future you would expect larger, longer more intense heat waves and we've seen that in the last few summers," NOAA Climate Monitoring chief Derek Arndt said.

The 100-degree heat, drought, early snowpack melt and beetles waking from hibernation early to strip trees all combined to set the stage for the current unusual spread of wildfires in the West, said University of Montana ecosystems professor Steven Running, an expert on wildfires.

While at least 15 climate scientists told The Associated Press that this long hot U.S. summer is consistent with what is to be expected in global warming, history is full of such extremes, said John Christy at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. He's a global warming skeptic who says, "The guilty party in my view is Mother Nature."

But the vast majority of mainstream climate scientists, such as Meehl, disagree: "This is what global warming is like, and we'll see more of this as we go into the future."

  • Discuss
  • Print

Related Stories

Comments » 13

jwputnam writes:

BS

OldMarcoMan writes:

Putnam is to kind.

happy34145 writes:

Putnam is dead on!

KlausStoertebeker writes:

This are the first signs of the apocalypse. America will decline first. December 21, 2012 is deadline. Nostradamus said it is over. The Maya calender ended. The hieroglyphs predict the final days. You can ignore but not avoid it. A real American characteristic.

1Paradiselost writes:

Marco will be under 10 feet of water in 80 years. I'll be dead and never know the difference.

marco97 writes:

Europe just had one of the coldest winters. Record are broken every year for both coldest and hottest days. Gore is an idiot.

2themoon writes:

liberal idiots and their wacko beliefs. 1900 was the worst hurricane season on record, gee they were lucky not to have these morons running around yelling'GLOBAL WARMING!!!'

KlausStoertebeker writes:

in response to 2themoon:

liberal idiots and their wacko beliefs. 1900 was the worst hurricane season on record, gee they were lucky not to have these morons running around yelling'GLOBAL WARMING!!!'

The only idiot and moron are you. You are far below average educated super Americans understand nothing.

2themoon writes:

Santa Klaus have you seen your own spelling
? you are the idiot my friend!!!!
go back to school santa and get a present under your tree, maybe a how to spell book?

LittlePond writes:

in response to 2themoon:

Santa Klaus have you seen your own spelling
? you are the idiot my friend!!!!
go back to school santa and get a present under your tree, maybe a how to spell book?

2themoon, have you seen your capitalization and punctuation? Maybe you should go back to 3rd grade.

happy34145 writes:

..Not to nit pick , but when correcting an incorrect use of english grammar one should be quick to point out such grammatical errors such as '3rd' grade instead of spelling out the longhand pronunciation of 'third' grade. LittlePond you look like an idiot right now. "Language is the means to convey a message or meaning within its text or speech" Do you think 2themoon got their point across to the average reader? I do. Grow up (and go back to school) LittlePond

KlausStoertebeker writes:

"Language is the means to convey a message or meaning within its text or speech" Do you think 2themoon got their point across to the average reader? I do. Grow up (and go back to school) unhappy34145

Why do you do not yourself?
"...of english grammar...?

Correct is:...of English grammar....!

To hard for you? No surprise for me.

However, the subject is global warning. Ir will be better for you see the sign and follow Al Gore.

WhiskeyTangoFoxtrot writes:

While I agree that Al Gore is a moron and was instrumental in demonizing the oil industry and helping to ruin the country by doing so. There is no denying it is getting warmer. Look at temps in the Midwest this past winter and the past few weeks.

While I dont subscribe to the inventor of the internet beliefs. I do believe the planet is continuously changing. It is mother nature. No humans can change that. No matter what they believe.

Share your thoughts

Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.

Comments can be shared on Facebook and Yahoo!. Add both options by connecting your profiles.

Features