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July 26 - Cyprus. Cuba. Turkey. Canada. Northern Ireland. Antarctica. All recorded their hottest-ever temperatures in the last two years, and according to a new study, more such extremes are coming.
In the next three decades, record-shattering heat waves could become two to seven times more frequent in the world than in the last 30 years, scientists report in a study published Monday (July 26) in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Beyond 2050, if current greenhouse gas emissions trends continue, such record-breaking heatwaves could be three to 21 times more frequent, the study found.
Even with the records seen in 2021, we haven t seen anything close to the most intense heat waves possible under today s climate, let alone the ones we expect to see in the coming decades, said co-author Erich Fischer, a climate scientist at ETH Zurich.
Record-smashing heat extremes may become much more likely with climate change
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