
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
A new study claims that global warming will deliver 4 fewer mild days per year by 2065, and 10 fewer mild days by 2100 – out of an annual average of 74 mild days per year. But the study’s rigid definition of a “mild day”, which the author uses as the basis of speculation about the impact of projected climate changes on human wellbeing, takes no consideration of people’s ability to adapt to different climates.
Shifting patterns of mild weather in response to projected radiative forcing
Karin van der Wiel, Sarah B. Kapnick, Gabriel A. Vecchi
Abstract
Climate change has been shown to impact the mean climate state and climate extremes. Though climate extremes have the potential to disrupt society, extreme conditions are rare by definition. In contrast, mild weather occurs frequently and many human activities are built around it. We provide a global analysis of mild weather based on simple criteria and explore changes in response to radiative forcing. We find a slight global mean decrease in the annual number of mild days projected both in the near future (−4 days per year, 2016–2035) and at the end of this century (−10 days per year, 2081–2100). Projected seasonal and regional redistributions of mild days are substantially greater. These changes are larger than the interannual variability of mild weather caused by El Niño–Southern Oscillation. Finally, we show an observed global decrease in the recent past, and that observed regional changes in mild weather resemble projections.
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The aim of this study is to investigate mild weather. Mild weather is weather that is neither too hot, too cold, too humid nor rainy–weather that could also be described as being “pleasant”. Mild weather occurs frequently in most parts of the world. It does not disrupt society the way climate extremes do, instead many human outdoor activities are enhanced by or depend on mild weather. Examples of such activities include picnics, football games, dog walks, bike rides, and outdoor events such as music festivals or weddings. Furthermore, the absence of mild weather during construction work, infrastructure projects, road works, landscaping projects, air travel, and rail or road transportation may cause delays with significant negative economic consequences. This relationship with recreational and industrial human activity makes mild weather a relevant meteorological condition for society.
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Here, we use a global definition of mild weather, based on simple meteorological criteria that should be relatively easy to relate to:
Daily maximum air temperature between 18 and 30 °C.
Daily total precipitation not exceeding 1 mm.
Daily mean dewpoint temperature not exceeding 20 °C.
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3.1 Present day global distribution of mild weather
The global distribution of days with mild weather in the control experiment is shown in Fig. 1a. Globally, an annual average number of 74 days with mild weather is found; this translates to 20% of all days in a year or, accounting for population density, 89 days per year per person.
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3.2 Changes in response to radiative forcing
In response to 21st century radiative forcing (RCP4.5), the global distribution of mild weather is projected to change (Fig. 2a). The tropics and subtropics are projected to have fewer days with mild weather; the extratropics are projected to have slightly more days with mild weather.
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4 Discussion
We have presented the first analysis of mild weather occurrence and projected changes with respect to climate change. The analysis is based on simple criteria that may be refined or extended in future work. Such refinements could include additional variables, for example, cloudiness or wind speed, or by defining spatially or seasonally varying criteria. Furthermore, the uncertainty of the projections related to scenario choice could be part of a future assessment. The current analysis is based on RCP4.5, the projected changes are likely to be larger in response to RCP8.5 that prescribes stronger radiative forcing.
In conclusion, the global mean number of mild days in a year is projected to decrease in response to radiative forcing. …
Read more: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-016-1885-9
To be fair the authors of the study admit that the criteria of the study is simplistic, and suggest future refinement or extension.
But the study’s attempt to infer the impact of projected changes in “mild weather” on human wellbeing ignores substantial evidence that people adapt to their local climate. What people in the tropics consider to be ideal or mild weather is very different to what people in cold countries consider to be mild weather.
For example, a study in 2014 found that the optimum temperature with regard to human mortality was slightly above average temperature, regardless of what that average temperature actually is.
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- The relative mortality risk for each country is at a minimum between the 66th and 80th percentile of mean temperature. Nine of the twelve countries have an “optimum” temperature between the 72nd and 76th percentiles.
- For each country the relative mortality risk is substantially higher at the 1 percentile temperature (cold end) than at the 99th percentile (hot end).
- Remarkably, the above bullet points hold not only for relatively cold countries such as Canada and South Korea but also the relatively warm ones such as Brazil and Thailand.
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Anyone who has lived in different climates is well aware of how radically perception of temperature changes in those different climates. I currently live in a warm climate on the edge of the tropics – I start to feel uncomfortably cold when the temperature drops below 70F.
Even assuming the models on which the study is based are correct, the study’s rigid definition of “mild weather” in my opinion makes its impossible to draw meaningful conclusions from this study, about the impact of different climatic conditions on human wellbeing.
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Mr Warroll writes;
“Anyone who has lived in different climates is well aware of how radically perception of temperature changes in those different climates.”, which is certainly true, but further, I can tell that as our hot summers fade, the very same temps can feel chilly to me, that seem quite comfy as our cool winter fades . . and vice versa.
Hello, we live in a retirement village in Gawler, South Australia, ages range from 75 to 95, oh so vunerable people, Hi. Yesterday the temperature was 36 C, today its 26C with rain and a very cold wind.
So how many died overnight, none of course, its what we are used to, its called Summer.
Australia is a land of heat and cold, flood and droughts, its all normal.
Michael
@ur momisugly Gareth Phillips January 19, 2017 at 7:10 am
How is the Arctic doing at the moment Bruce?
Seriously large Russian icebreakers getting stuck in sea ice up to 2.5m thick Jan 2017
http://siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/n0847-icebreakers-make-historic-arctic-voyage-then-get-stuck-in-frozen-sea-on-return-journey/
Can’t be. You can cross the Arctic in a canoe and not find enough ice to chill your vodka martini. (Shaken.)
Or so I’m told.
“Slightly Less Mild Weather by 2065”
We are totally doomed!
Think that maps say it all:
https://www.google.at/search?client=ms-android-samsung&ei=npaDWMntMoKqsgHqq77oDw&q=death+rates+by+country++maps&oq=death+rates+by+country++maps&gs_l=mobile-gws-serp.3
v’
Even assuming the paper’s definition of “mild weather”, I find their conclusions non-credible. Consider – according to their definition, mild weather is essential for activities such as construction. Add their claim that there are only 74 such days (on average) and you must conclude that construction can only possibly happen during about a 2 1/2 month period. Yet we know from everyday observation that construction occurs over a period closer to 2/3 of the year.
Assuming they are talking about American Football (plausible, I think, since all three authors are based in the US), they picked a game that is notorious for going on no matter what the weather is – a game that is played only rarely in their ideal conditions. How many SuperBowls do you remember being played above 64F?
The claim of less mild future weather is actually a claim against the pattern of temperature observations over the past centuries. The records show a steady decline in Tmax and a stronger rise in Tmin, evidence that temps are increasingly mild.
https://rclutz.wordpress.com/2016/09/16/its-not-hotter-its-milder/