Book contents
- Drought, Flood, Fire
- Drought, Flood, Fire
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Climate Extremes, Climate Attribution, Extreme Event Attribution
- 2 Welcome to an Awesome Planet
- 3 The Earth Is a Negentropic System, or “the Bright Side of Empty”
- 4 Do-It-Yourself Climate Change Science
- 5 Temperature Extremes – Impacts and Attribution
- 6 Precipitation Extremes
- 7 Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons
- 8 Conceptual Models of Climate Change and Prediction, and How They Relate to Floods and Fires
- 9 Climate Change Made the 2015–2016 El Niño More Extreme
- 10 Bigger La Niñas and the East African Climate Paradox
- 11 Fire and Drought in the Western United States
- 12 Fire and Australia’s Black Summer
- 13 Driving toward +4°C on a Dixie® Cup Planet
- 14 We Can Afford to Wear a White Hat
- Appendix A Few Resources for Further Reading and Research
- Index
1 - Climate Extremes, Climate Attribution, Extreme Event Attribution
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2021
- Drought, Flood, Fire
- Drought, Flood, Fire
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Climate Extremes, Climate Attribution, Extreme Event Attribution
- 2 Welcome to an Awesome Planet
- 3 The Earth Is a Negentropic System, or “the Bright Side of Empty”
- 4 Do-It-Yourself Climate Change Science
- 5 Temperature Extremes – Impacts and Attribution
- 6 Precipitation Extremes
- 7 Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons
- 8 Conceptual Models of Climate Change and Prediction, and How They Relate to Floods and Fires
- 9 Climate Change Made the 2015–2016 El Niño More Extreme
- 10 Bigger La Niñas and the East African Climate Paradox
- 11 Fire and Drought in the Western United States
- 12 Fire and Australia’s Black Summer
- 13 Driving toward +4°C on a Dixie® Cup Planet
- 14 We Can Afford to Wear a White Hat
- Appendix A Few Resources for Further Reading and Research
- Index
Summary
Beginning in northwestern Kenya with the story of Eregae and Aita Nakali, this chapter introduces the new science of climate extremes and extreme event attribution. Between 2015 and 2019, the “fingerprints” of climate change slapped hundreds of millions of people. Extreme heat waves, floods, droughts, and wildfires exacted a terrible toll on developed and developing nations alike. These catastrophes affected hundreds of millions of people and resulted in hundreds of billions of dollars in losses. Fire-afflicted movie stars in California and ranchers in Australia; drought-stricken South Africans; poor flooded fisher-folk in Bangladesh; Houston's middle-class families riven by flood: these are just some of the people who felt the crushing blow of more extreme climate. While humans have always faced the perils of natural disasters, the data suggest that the human and economic cost of climate and weather extremes is increasing rapidly as our population and economies expand and our planet warms rapidly. Since the early 1980s, the number of large catastrophes has quadrupled, inflicting billions of dollars in losses and impacting vulnerable populations on every continent. Understanding the link between extremes and warming is both a moral and an existential imperative.
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- Information
- Drought, Flood, FireHow Climate Change Contributes to Catastrophes, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021