Global heat wave hazard considering humidity effects during the 21st century — Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society

Global heat wave hazard considering humidity effects during the 21st century (#1036)

Xi Chen 1 , Ning Li 1 , Jiawei Liu 2 , Zhengtao Zhang 3 , Yuan Liu 1
  1. Key Laboratory of Environmental Change and Natural Disaster of Ministry of Education, Faculty of Geographical Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
  2. School of Atmospheric Sciences, Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology, Nanjing, China
  3. Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, CAS, Beijing, China

Humidity is a significant factor contributed to heat stress but without enough consideration in studies of quantifying heat hazard or heat risk assessment. Here the simplified wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT) considering joint effects of temperature and humidity was utilized as a heat index and the number of annual total heat wave days (HWDs) was employed to quantify heat hazard. In order to evaluate the humidity effects on heat waves, we quantified the difference in the number of HWDs over global land based on air temperature and WBGT. Spatial and temporal changes in surface air temperature, relative humidity, WBGT and the difference in HWDs were analyzed using multi-model simulations for the reference period (1986-2005) and different greenhouse gas emission scenarios. Our analysis suggests that annual mean WBGT has been increasing since 1986, which is consistent with the rising trend in surface air temperature despite a slight decrease in relative humidity. Additionally, changes in annual mean WBGT are smaller and more spatially uniform than those in annual mean air temperature as a cancelation effect between temperature and water vapor. Results show that there is an underestimation of around 40-140 days in the number of HWDs per year in most regions within 15° latitude of the equator (the humid and warm tropics) during 2076-2095 without considering humidity effects. However, the estimation of HWDs has limited distinction between using WBGT and temperature alone in arid or cold regions.

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