The Economist Asia Edition – July 27, 2019

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

58 TheEconomistJuly 27th 2019


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xtreme heatis ruinous to productivi-
ty, particularly if you are a criminal.
Several American police forces posted
messages to their social-media accounts
last weekend declaring a moratorium on
crime. “It is just too hot to be outside com-
mitting crimes,” wrote the Park Forest Po-
lice Department in Illinois, on its Facebook
page. In some cases, it seems to have
worked. “We have had zero customers stay
the night at our ‘hotel’, so we appreciate all
of the criminals adhering to the heat advi-
sory,” tweeted the Malden Police in Massa-
chusetts on Sunday.
The messages came as scorching tem-
peratures swept across America, placing
more than 100m people under excessive-
heat warnings. Temperatures hovered ei-
ther side of 40°C on the east coast. On July
18th Mitch Petrus, a well-known retired
player of American football, died of heat-
stroke after working outdoors all day. At

least five other deaths have been reported.
Europeans have also been sweating, for
the second time this summer. A month
ago, warm air from the Sahara contributed
to making it the continent’s hottest June on
record. At the top of Mont Blanc, western
Europe’s highest mountain, instruments
recorded 7°C (the normal June temperature
would be below freezing). At Gallargues-le-
Montueux near Nîmes, in France, tempera-
tures peaked at 45.9°C. The previous record
anywhere in that country was 1.8°C lower.
Linked to these temperatures, in Alaska
(see Lexington) and Portugal (pictured),
forest fires are raging.
If your hunch is that this kind of ex-

treme weather is more common today than
it was once-upon-a-time, you are correct.
When, in 2003, tens of thousands of people
in Europe died prematurely as a result of a
two-week heatwave, it was deemed to be a
once-in-1,000-years event. Twelve years
later, a study led by Nikolaos Christidis of
the Hadley Centre, the climate-research di-
vision of Britain’s Met Office, found that
heatwaves of this severity had become
once-in-100-years events, and would be
commonplace by the 2040s.
The question on many people’s minds is
whether these changes, and specific events
like this week’s temperatures in America
and Europe, are caused by greenhouse gas-
es accumulating in the atmosphere. For
years, the semi-official line was that no
single weather event could be blamed on
climate change, only trends. That began to
change in 2004, with the publication of the
first “attribution” study. This focused on
the European heatwave of 2003, when aver-
age summer temperatures broke through a
threshold until then unbreached in 150
years of records. By comparing simula-
tions of a world with and without green-
house-gas emissions, Peter Stott at the Met
Office and his colleagues found that cli-
mate change had made the record-break-
ing heatwave at least twice as likely as it
would otherwise have been.

Extreme weather

Climate blame game


Greenhouse-gas emissions contribute to the rising frequency of heatwaves

Science & technology


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