- Diabetes Prevention Program Saves People Money, Study Shows
- Despite Previous Data, Paxlovid May Be Useful for Long Covid After All
- Some GLP-1s Achieve More Weight Loss Than Others: Study
- More Evidence Bolsters the Oral Herpes and Alzheimer’s Link
- Health Advocates Are Unhappy with FDA Guidance on Lead Levels in Baby Food
- FDA Calls for Better Accuracy of Pulse Oximeters in People of Color
- Fluoride May Be Linked to Decreased IQ, Says “Limited Data,” Hard-to-Interpret Study
- First U.S. Death From Bird Flu Reported in Louisiana
- Blood Test May Help Predict How Long Immunity Lasts
- DoxyPEP Lowers Rate of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs), Data Suggests
Expect More Record-Breaking Heat in U.S., Scientists Warn
Americans will face many more record-breaking hot days later this century if greenhouse gases continue to be pumped into the atmosphere at current levels, a new U.S. study warns.
Scientists using computer modeling predict about 15 daily record-high temperatures for every record-low by about 2065 if no action is taken. That ratio could jump further if climate change-causing greenhouse gas emissions rise, the study from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) predicts.
In comparison, the ratio of record-high temperatures to record-lows has averaged about two to one over the last decade, according to the study authors.
“More and more frequently, climate change will affect Americans with record-setting heat,” lead author Gerald Meehl said in a NCAR news release. He’s a senior scientist at the research center.
The 15-to-1 ratio of record highs to lows is based on temperatures across the continental United States rising by just over 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) from recent years. That’s about the amount of warming expected to occur with the current rate of greenhouse gas emissions, the researchers said.
“An increase in average temperatures of a few degrees may not seem like much, but it correlates with a noticeable increase in days that are hotter than any in the record, and nights that will remain warmer than we’ve ever experienced in the past,” Meehl said.
Greenhouse gases trap heat in the atmosphere. They come from a variety of everyday activities in developed countries, such as driving, using electricity and heating homes.
If greenhouse gas emissions continue to expand and cause temperatures in the United States to rise more than 4 degrees C (7.2 degrees F), there could be 38 record highs for every record low, the researchers said.
“Every degree of warming makes a substantial amount of difference, with the ratio of record highs to record lows becoming much greater,” Meehl said.
“Even with much warmer temperatures on average, we will still have winter and we will still get record-cold temperatures, but the numbers of those will be really small compared to record-high maximums,” he explained.
These findings are a stark reminder of how U.S. temperatures have been shifting and continue to do so, said study co-author Claudia Tebaldi.
“These changes pose adaptation challenges to both human and natural systems,” Tebaldi said. “Only a substantial mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions may stop this increase, or at least slow down its pace.”
The study results were published Dec. 6 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
More information
The World Health Organization explains the health threats posed by climate change.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.