Current:Home > MarketsGlobal Warming Is Messing with the Jet Stream. That Means More Extreme Weather. -Zenith Profit Hub
Global Warming Is Messing with the Jet Stream. That Means More Extreme Weather.
View
Date:2025-04-17 04:37:16
Greenhouse gases are increasingly disrupting the jet stream, a powerful river of winds that steers weather systems in the Northern Hemisphere. That’s causing more frequent summer droughts, floods and wildfires, a new study says.
The findings suggest that summers like 2018, when the jet stream drove extreme weather on an unprecedented scale across the Northern Hemisphere, will be 50 percent more frequent by the end of the century if emissions of carbon dioxide and other climate pollutants from industry, agriculture and the burning of fossil fuels continue at a high rate.
In a worst-case scenario, there could be a near-tripling of such extreme jet stream events, but other factors, like aerosol emissions, are a wild card, according to the research, published today in the journal Science Advances.
The study identifies how the faster warming of the Arctic twists the jet stream into an extreme pattern that leads to persistent heat and drought extremes in some regions, with flooding in other areas.
The researchers said they were surprised by how big a role other pollutants play in the jet stream’s behavior, especially aerosols—microscopic solid or liquid particles from industry, agriculture, volcanoes and plants. Aerosols have a cooling effect that partially counteracts the jet stream changes caused by greenhouse gases, said co-author Dim Comou, a climate and extreme weather researcher at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
“The aerosols forcing was a bit of a surprise to us,” Comou said. “Those emissions are expected to decrease rapidly in the mid-latitude regions in the next 10 to 30 years” because of phasing out of pollution to protect people from breathing unhealthy air.
In recent decades, aerosol pollution has actually been slowing down the global warming process across the Northern Hemisphere’s mid-latitude industrial regions. If aerosol emissions drop rapidly, as projected, these regions would warm faster.
That would change the temperature contrast between the Arctic and mid-latitudes, which would dampen the warming effect of greenhouse gases on the jet stream. By how much depends on the rate, location and timing of the reductions, and the offset would end by mid-century, when man-made aerosols are expected to be mostly gone and no longer reflecting incoming solar radiation, said Pennsylvania State University climate scientist and study lead author Michael Mann.
Repeats of the Summer of 2018?
The jet stream is a powerful high-altitude wind that shapes and moves weather systems from west to east. Different branches of the jet stream undulate from the subtropics to the edge of the Arctic. In the past 15 years at least, the jet stream has been coiling up more, slithering farther north and south. When it gets stuck in the extreme pattern identified by the scientists, it leads to more deadly and costly weather extremes.
That extremely wavy pattern, called “quasi-resonant amplification,” was evident during the extreme summer of 2018, Mann said.
It played out in real time on TV and in newspaper headlines about droughts, floods, heat extremes and wildfires—an “unprecedented hemisphere-wide pattern,” Mann said. “It played a key role in the large-scale jet pattern we saw in late July, associated with deep stagnant high pressure centers over California and Europe.”
That brought blazing temperatures and wildfire conditions to California, flooding over the Eastern U.S. and unprecedented heat to the Scandinavian Arctic region, as well as a six-month heat wave and drought across parts of Central Europe, all events showing a clear global warming fingerprint, according to scientists.
The new study focuses on summer extremes, while other research has looked at how global warming affects the jet stream in winter.
What Happens in the Arctic Doesn’t Stay There
Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research who was not involved with the new research, said the study has some “compelling new evidence on the link between amplified Arctic warming and extreme mid-latitude weather during the summer months.”
What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay there. Increased melting of reflective sea ice in summer exposes more dark-colored ocean to absorb heat, and that heats the surrounding land. As Arctic warming races ahead of the rest of the global average, the temperature contrasts that drive the jet stream are reduced, and the river of wind more frequently twists into sharp and slow-moving or stationary waves.
“When the jet stream enters this wavy state, extreme weather tends to occur on either side of the amplified ridges and troughs as the storm track becomes locked in place,” Swain said. Then, specific regions experience long periods of cool and stormy or, contrarily, hot and dry weather, he added.
veryGood! (96662)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Australia will crack down on illegal vape sales in a bid to reduce teen use
- Feeding Cows Seaweed Reduces Their Methane Emissions, but California Farms Are a Long Way From Scaling Up the Practice
- Scientists Are Pursuing Flood-Resistant Crops, Thanks to Climate-Induced Heavy Rains and Other Extreme Weather
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- The best picket signs of the Hollywood writers strike
- ESPN announces layoffs as part of Disney's moves to cut costs
- Homeware giant Bed Bath & Beyond has filed for bankruptcy
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- In ‘Silent Spring,’ Rachel Carson Described a Fictional, Bucolic Hamlet, Much Like Her Hometown. Now, There’s a Plastics Plant Under Construction 30 Miles Away
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- EPA Opens Civil Rights Investigation Into Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley’
- Shares of smaller lenders sink once again, reviving fears about the banking sector
- Steve Irwin's Son Robert Irwin and Heath Ledger's Niece Rorie Buckey Made Red Carpet Debut
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Lindsay Lohan's Totally Grool Road to Motherhood
- In the US West, Researchers Consider a Four-Legged Tool to Fight Two Foes: Wildfire and Cheatgrass
- In the US West, Researchers Consider a Four-Legged Tool to Fight Two Foes: Wildfire and Cheatgrass
Recommendation
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Warming Trends: Nature and Health Studies Focused on the Privileged, $1B for Climate School and Old Tires Detour Into Concrete
Inside Clean Energy: Taking Stock of the Energy Storage Boom Happening Right Now
Everything We Know About the It Ends With Us Movie So Far
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
Sinkholes Attributed to Gas Drilling Underline the Stakes in Pennsylvania’s Governor’s Race
McDonald's franchises face more than $200,000 in fines for child-labor law violations
Twitter once muzzled Russian and Chinese state propaganda. That's over now