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Unlocking the Secrets of Extreme Weather: A New Era in Climate Adaptation

A team of scientists have brought together methods to see beyond the limitations of conventional weather records, which typically only cover the past century.

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In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Communications, researchers have developed a cutting-edge toolkit to help communities predict and prepare for extreme weather events that were previously unknown or unrecorded in modern history. By combining conventional records, natural archives like tree rings, “what-if” scenarios based on past events, and climate models, scientists can now look back hundreds or even thousands of years to uncover the secrets of our climate system.

The study’s lead author, Timo Kelder, emphasizes that we’ve been limited by thinking extreme weather is only as bad as what we’ve measured since weather stations were invented. However, this new approach reveals a more complete picture of possible extreme weather events, allowing communities to better prepare for the unexpected.

One of the key methods used in the study was analyzing tree rings, which preserve a year’s worth of climate history. Researchers reconstructed 850 years of drought patterns in northwestern China, revealing extreme events that would have been invisible in modern records. Similarly, by digging through historical archives, the team found that June 1846 in Durham, UK was significantly hotter than any modern June temperature, and September 1774 in Oxford was wetter than any month recorded in the 250 years since.

The study’s findings highlight the importance of adapting to extreme weather events. By using these new methods to anticipate the unseen, communities can improve early warning systems, upgrade infrastructure, and make transformative social changes to reduce vulnerability.

As co-author Dorothy Heinrich notes, “Unprecedented weather doesn’t just break records — it breaks communities, infrastructure, and lives.” However, science can help us imagine the unimaginable, uncover these risks, and prepare. Our future depends on how quickly and thoroughly we adapt today. By embracing this new era in climate adaptation, we can finally stop being surprised by extreme weather events and build a more resilient future for all.

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The Wealthy Elite’s Carbon Footprint: A Study Reveals the True Extent of Global Warming Since 1990

Wealthy individuals have a higher carbon footprint. A new study quantifies the climate outcomes of these inequalities. It finds that the world’s wealthiest 10% are responsible for two thirds of observed global warming since 1990 and the resulting increases in climate extremes such as heatwaves and droughts.

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The study published in Nature Climate Change sheds light on the disproportionate impact of the world’s wealthiest individuals on global warming since 1990. According to the research, the top 10% of the global population is responsible for two-thirds of observed global warming and the resulting increases in climate extremes such as heatwaves and droughts.

The study assesses the contribution of high-emitting groups within societies, finding that the top 1% of the wealthiest individuals globally have a carbon footprint 26 times higher than the global average when it comes to monthly 1-in-100-year heat extremes. This also applies to Amazon droughts, with these emissions being 17 times more detrimental.

Lead author Sarah Schöngart explains, “Our study shows that extreme climate impacts are not just the result of abstract global emissions but can be directly linked to our lifestyle and investment choices, which in turn are linked to wealth.”

Using a novel modeling framework combining economic data and climate simulations, researchers were able to trace emissions from different global income groups. They found that emissions from the wealthiest 10% in the United States and China alone led to a two-to threefold increase in heat extremes across vulnerable regions.

The study’s findings are clear: if everyone had emitted like the bottom 50% of the global population, the world would have seen minimal additional warming since 1990. Coauthor Carl-Friedrich Schleussner emphasizes that addressing this imbalance is crucial for fair and effective climate action.

Moreover, the research highlights the importance of emissions embedded in financial investments rather than just personal consumption. Targeting the financial flows and portfolios of high-income individuals could yield substantial climate benefits.

“This is not an academic discussion – it’s about real impacts of the climate crisis today,” says Schleussner. “Climate action that doesn’t address outsize responsibilities of wealthiest members society risks missing one most powerful levers we have to reduce future harm.”

The authors suggest that their findings could motivate progressive policy instruments targeted at societal elites, noting such policies can foster social acceptance of climate action. Making rich individual polluters pay can also provide much-needed support for adaptation and loss and damage in vulnerable countries.

In conclusion, the study emphasizes the need to rebalance responsibility for climate action in line with actual emissions contributions is essential not just slow global warming but achieve more just resilient world.

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Climate-Driven Wildfires Wreaking Havoc on US Health and Economy

Scientists say human-caused climate change led to 15,000 additional early deaths from wildfire air pollution in the continental United States during the 15-year period ending in 2020.

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Climate change is having a devastating impact on the United States, particularly when it comes to wildfires. A recent study published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment has found that human-caused climate change led to an additional 15,000 deaths from wildfire air pollution in the continental US during the 15-year period ending in 2020.

The study, led by Oregon State University researcher Bev Law, is the first to quantify the number of people dying due to a warming climate causing fires to release increasing amounts of fine particulate matter into the air. This phenomenon, known as PM2.5, can be inhaled deeply into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream, posing serious health risks.

The researchers estimate that during the study period, a total of 164,000 deaths resulted from wildfire PM2.5, with 15,000 of those attributed to climate change. This means that absent climate change, the total would have been 149,000. The average annual death rate from wildfire PM2.5 during this period was 5.14 per 100,000 people, roughly double the US death rate from tropical cyclones like hurricanes.

The economic burden associated with these extra deaths is staggering, estimated at $160 billion. This figure takes into account productivity losses, healthcare costs, and a concept known as value of statistical life, which assigns a monetary value to reduction in mortality risk.

California, Oregon, and Washington bore the greatest economic burden from climate-driven wildfire PM2.5, according to the study. “Without efforts to address climate change,” Law noted, “wildfires and associated fine particulate matter will continue to increase.” The researchers project that by midcentury, relative to the decade ending in 2020, mortality from smoke will rise by at least 50%, with resulting annual damages of $244 billion.

The study highlights the urgent need for action to address climate change and mitigate its impacts on human health. As Law emphasized, exposure to PM2.5 is a known cause of cardiovascular disease and is linked to the onset and worsening of respiratory illness. The ongoing trends of increasing wildfire severity track with climate projections, underscoring how climate change manifestations like earlier snowmelt, intensified heat waves, and drier air have already expanded forest fire extent and accelerated daily fire growth rates.

The research was conducted by an interdisciplinary team from Oregon State University, the University of California, Merced, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the Woodwell Climate Research Center, and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center of Harvard Medical School. Their findings serve as a stark reminder of the need for collective action to address the climate crisis and protect public health.

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2024 US Coastal Community Report Cards: Navigating Future Sea Levels with Data-Driven Insights

Researchers have released their 2024 U.S. sea level ‘report cards,’ providing updated analyses of sea level trends and projections for 36 coastal communities. Encompassing 55 years of historical data in a new, interactive dashboard, the report cards aid planning and adaptation efforts by forecasting rates of sea level rise to 2050.

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The 2024 US Coastal Community Report Cards have been released by the William & Mary’s Batten School and VIMS, providing valuable insights into sea level trends and projections for 36 coastal communities across the country. This year’s report cards feature an interactive dashboard and incorporate data from additional tide gauge stations in Annapolis, MD; Solomons Island, MD; Yorktown, VA; and Fort Myers, FL.

Unlike average global sea level rise projections, these report cards consider regional factors such as geological uplift, land subsidence, ocean currents, and other processes that impact local sea levels. “Many people who live near the coast want to know what they can reasonably expect over the next few decades,” says Molly Mitchell, an assistant professor at the Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences & VIMS. “Our reports are created using observed tide gauge data from the past 55 years and reflect the exact experience at the location of the gauge.”

The report cards group localities into four regions: East Coast, Gulf Coast, West Coast, and Alaskan Coast. Each report card displays monthly sea level averages, high-and low-water levels caused by storms and other transient events, as well as a decadal signal showing the influence of longer-term climate patterns such as El Niño.

The projections also show the range of sea level rise within the 95% confidence interval, allowing individuals and municipalities to plan adequately for the highest predicted rates of sea level rise. Most locations continue a trend of accelerating sea level rise; however, Mitchell notes that projections have remained mostly uniform since reporting began in 2018, apart from a few notable exceptions.

“One interesting new trend is the acceleration occurring in southeastern states such as South Carolina and Georgia,” said Mitchell. “We continue to see the fastest rates of sea level rise in Gulf states like Texas and Louisiana, but many of the East Coast stations are accelerating quite quickly, likely due to patterns of water distribution related to glacial melt from the Greenland ice sheet.”

Mitchell also notes that most West Coast localities have been fairly stable, despite past predictions that they would increase rapidly. This has led to some questions about why.

Information about the processes most affecting regional sea levels is listed on the Batten School & VIMS website: List of cities, states and processes. Emeritus Professor John Boon launched the sea level report cards in 2018 following the publication of the study Anthropocene Sea Level Change: A History of Recent Trends Observed in the U.S. East, Gulf and West Coast Regions, which showed a notable increase in sea level acceleration rates beginning in 2013-2014.

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