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Journal Article

2023: Weather and climate extremes hitting the globe with emerging features

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Li,  Chao       
Director’s Research Group, Department Climate Variability, MPI for Meteorology, Max Planck Society;

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s00376-024-4080-3.pdf
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Citation

Zhang, W., Clark, R., Zhou, T., Li, L., Li, C., Rivera, J., et al. (2024). 2023: Weather and climate extremes hitting the globe with emerging features. Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. doi:10.1007/s00376-024-4080-3.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000F-36CF-C
Abstract
Globally, 2023 was the warmest observed year on record since at least 1850 and, according to proxy evidence, possibly of the past 100 000 years. As in recent years, the record warmth has again been accompanied with yet more extreme weather and climate events throughout the world. Here, we provide an overview of those of 2023, with details and key background causes to help build upon our understanding of the roles of internal climate variability and anthropogenic climate change. We also highlight emerging features associated with some of these extreme events. Hot extremes are occurring earlier in the year, and increasingly simultaneously in differing parts of the world (e.g., the concurrent hot extremes in the Northern Hemisphere in July 2023). Intense cyclones are exacerbating precipitation extremes (e.g., the North China flooding in July and the Libya flooding in September). Droughts in some regions (e.g., California and the Horn of Africa) have transitioned into flood conditions. Climate extremes also show increasing interactions with ecosystems via wildfires (e.g., those in Hawaii in August and in Canada from spring to autumn 2023) and sandstorms (e.g., those in Mongolia in April 2023). Finally, we also consider the challenges to research that these emerging characteristics present for the strategy and practice of adaptation. © Institute of Atmospheric Physics/Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Science Press; British Crown Copyright, the Met Office 2024.