Atmospheric and heat waves: Scientists identify another way climate change ‘comes back to bite us’

    18 Jun 2025

    Climate scientist Michael Mann explains the complex connections between climate change, atmospheric waves, and extreme weather.

    Climate change has tripled the frequency of atmospheric wave events linked to extreme summer weather in the last 75 years, a new study has found. It may explain why long-range computer forecasts keep underestimating the surge in killer heatwaves, droughts and floods.

    In the 1950s, Earth averaged about one extreme weather-inducing planetary wave event a summer, but now it is getting about three per summer, according to the study in Monday’s Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) journal.

    Planetary waves are connected to 2021’s deadly and unprecedented Pacific Northwest heat wave, the 2010 Russian heatwave and Pakistan flooding and the 2003 killer European heatwave, the study said.

    “If you’re trying to visualise the planetary waves in the northern hemisphere, the easiest way to visualise them is on the weather map to look at the waviness in the jet stream as depicted on the weather map,” said study co-author Michael Mann, a University of Pennsylvania climate scientist.

    What are planetary waves and how do they influence extreme weather?

    Planetary waves flow across Earth all the time, but sometimes they get amplified, becoming stronger, and the jet stream gets wavier with bigger hills and valleys, Mann said. It’s called quasi-resonant amplification or QRA.

    This essentially means the wave gets stuck for weeks on end, locked in place. As a result, some places get seemingly endless rain while others endure oppressive heat with no relief.

    “A classic pattern would be like a high pressure out west (in the United States) and a low pressure back East and in summer 2018, that’s exactly what we had,” Mann said. “We had that configuration locked in place for like a month. So they (in the West) got the heat, the drought and the wildfires. We (in the East) got the excessive rainfall.”

    “It’s deep and it’s persistent,” Mann said. “You accumulate the rain for days on end or the ground is getting baked for days on end.”

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *