Climate change has made UK heatwave 10 times more likely, study finds

Climate change caused by human activities has made the July heatwave in the UK ten times more likely, according to a study published on Friday.

Climate change has made UK heatwave 10 times more likely, study finds

Climate change caused by human activities has made the July heatwave in the UK ten times more likely, according to a study published on Friday.

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The temperature exceeded the 40°C threshold in the United Kingdom on July 19, a first in this country hit, like the rest of Western Europe, by a heat wave which caused fires around London, damaging homes.

An international team of researchers modeled the probability of such a heat wave in a pre-industrial climate, then compared this probability with that of the current climate, i.e. an average warming of global temperatures of 1.2°C compared to the pre-industrial period. .

They focused on records set in the hardest hit parts of the UK, central England and east Wales. It shows that this probability is at least ten times higher with global warming.

According to this study, extreme events affecting Europe have increased even more than predicted by climate models.

"In Europe and other parts of the world, we are seeing more and more heat waves with record heat, resulting in extreme temperatures, which are getting higher faster than in most climate models," says Friederike Otto, from the Grantham Institute at Imperial College London.

“This is a worrying finding that suggests that if carbon emissions are not reduced quickly, the consequences of climate change on extreme heat in Europe, which is already extremely deadly, could be even worse than expected,” she continues. .

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