Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Placing the (Specific) Blame on Climate Change

Image result for climate change attribution
National Academy of Sciences report on
climate change attribution - Credit: The
National Academies Press
In the fascinating and rapidly expanding field of climate science, it was recently announced that scientists can now blame individual natural disasters on climate change. This breakthrough will be beneficial in multiple ways to realize how human-caused climate change impacts natural disasters and to know which extreme weather events can be directly linked to climate change.

According to Scientific American, the idea of attributing a single weather event to climate change began in 2003, with a climate expert at the University of Oxford, Myles Allen. At that time, about fifteen years ago, the main understanding among scientists was that even though it was believed that climate change had a significant impact on the weather, there was no way to determine the exact influence of climate change any individual event. The reasoning behind this thinking was that there are just so many factors that play a part in affecting the weather, including normal climate fluctuations, that it would be extremely difficult to pinpoint the blame on climate change.

Myles Allen - Credit: Environmental
Change Institute
Allen suggested that with a better understanding of the climate system, we might be able to attribute extreme weather events to climate change. He also proposed that if this breakthrough occurred, the public would be able to blame greenhouse gas emitters for causing the damage of climate-related events. This would be a huge step forward to help limit greenhouse gas emissions even further and realizing which extreme weather events have climate changes' "fingerprints" all over them.

Fortunately, eighteen years since Allen's idea, extreme event attribution is now not only possible but a major part in one of the most rapidly and expanding subfields of climate research. New reports and papers seem to be published weekly about attributing climate change to extreme weather events. It's been like opening up the floodgates; there's been an explosion of research recently.

Image result for world weather attribution
World Weather Attribution's logo -
Credit: Twitter
The field has become so closely monitored that many reputable sources report research about attributing specific weather events to climate change. For instance, if you go to Climate Central's homepage and scroll down, you'll see a list of recent weather events that have been looked at closely to see if climate change played a role in their occurrence or severity. They even have a research paper about events as recent as the cold temperature outbreak that occurred from late December 2017 through mid-January 2018, where they conclude that cold outbreaks are getting less frequent due to climate change, but they are still likely to occur in North America every year. More research has been posted on their website of other extreme weather cases that scientists did find to be caused by climate change, such as Hurricane Harvey's Record-Shattering Rainfall (all of these are very interesting to read). This is all part of the World Weather Attribution (WWA) project, which was started in 2014, and its goal is to provide climate change attribution results in real time when natural disasters are in the news, relief organizations are paying attention, and funds for relief might be easier to mobilize. This way, in the immediate aftermath of the natural disaster, citizens and government officials will be able to know if this was something that was caused by anthropogenic climate change or not.

Image result for bulletin of american meteorological society climate change attribution
BAMS yearly report on the impacts of climate
 change on extreme weather - Credit: AMS
Additionally, the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (BAMS) and the National Academy of Sciences each issue their own reports on the impacts of climate change on the past year's extreme weather events and how the science is doing behind all of these claims.

As this relatively new field still grows, the impacts that it will have on our society are still being realized. For instance, legal experts say that climate change attribution studies could play a large role in lawsuits against companies, industries, and governments.

But possibly the most important impact of this field of climate change attribution is that it will help capture the public's attention in ways that long-term projections for the future climate of our planet cannot. When most people hear the common climate change phrases that "2017 was one of the warmest years on record," that "sea levels are rising 3.4 mm per year," or that "we will limit global warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius," people either don't really understand them and the ramifications of them or they just simply don't care. However, I believe, and many scientists and researchers think, that being able to attribute specific weather events to human-caused climate change will help to make the general public more aware of the plethora of impacts of climate change. People will realize that the impacts of climate change can already be felt right now; we don't have to wait another 20 years. When they see a hurricane or a tornado or a wildfire destroy a city (maybe even the city that they live in), and then that event gets attributed to anthropogenic climate change, people may realize that climate change is impacting them right now (and that something needs to be done to stop or slow down climate change).

I think that Myles Allen sums it up nicely by saying, "I think the public and many policymakers don't really take those 100-year forecasts very seriously. They are much more seriously interested in the question of what is happening now and why—which boils down to attribution." I'm very interested in following this emerging field of climate science to see where it goes and how much of an impact it has on our society in the future.

2 comments:

  1. I remember that it used to snow all the time in winter in Shanghai. But we have not seen any significant snow since 2006. Most of the snow after that was just less than an inch of flurry that quickly melted away. This is a very pressing issue and it is affecting people in many ways

    ReplyDelete
  2. Looking over this past year, it seems as though the natural disasters just pile up: Harvey, California’s wildfires and mudslides, intense tropical storms, and so on. And I definitely believe that the very human repercussions of these anomalies will make climate change difficult to ignore. Now climate change is an issue directly affecting us and our well-being, and is not simply an issue for our grandchildren to worry about.

    ReplyDelete