Jan.
27, 2013 — Even if you live more than 1,000 miles from the nearest large city,
it could be affecting your weather.
In a
new study that shows the extent to which human activities are influencing the
atmosphere, scientists have concluded that the heat generated by everyday
activities in metropolitan areas alters the character of the jet stream and
other major atmospheric systems. This affects temperatures across thousands of
miles, significantly warming some areas and cooling others, according to the
study this week in Nature Climate Change.
The
extra "waste heat" generated from buildings, cars, and other sources
in major Northern Hemisphere urban areas causes winter warming across large
areas of northern North America and northern Asia. Temperatures in some remote
areas increase by as much as 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the research by
scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography; University of California, San Diego; Florida
State University; and the National Center for Atmospheric
Research.
At
the same time, the changes to atmospheric circulation caused by the waste heat
cool areas of Europe by as much as 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F), with much of the temperature decrease
occurring in the fall.
The
net effect on global mean temperatures is nearly negligible -- an average
increase worldwide of just 0.01 degrees C (about 0.02 degrees F). This is
because the total human-produced waste heat is only about 0.3 percent of the
heat transported across higher latitudes by atmospheric and oceanic
circulations.
However,
the noticeable impact on regional temperatures may explain why some regions are
experiencing more winter warming than projected by climate computer models, the
researchers conclude. They suggest that models be adjusted to take the
influence of waste heat into account.
"The
burning of fossil fuel not only emits greenhouse gases but also directly
affects temperatures because of heat that escapes from sources like buildings
and cars," says NCAR scientist Aixue Hu, a co-author of the study.
"Although much of this waste heat is concentrated in large cities, it can
change atmospheric patterns in a way that raises or lowers temperatures across
considerable distances."
Distinct
from urban heat island effect
The
researchers stressed that the effect of waste heat is distinct from the
so-called urban heat island effect. Such islands are mainly a function
of the heat collected and re-radiated by pavement, buildings, and other urban
features, whereas the new study examines the heat produced directly through
transportation, heating and cooling units, and other activities.
The
study, "Energy consumption and the unexplained winter warming over
northern Asia and North America," appeared online January 27. It was
funded by the National Science Foundation, NCAR's sponsor, as well as the
Department of Energy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Hu,
along with lead author Guang Zhang of Scripps and Ming Cai of Florida State
University, analyzed the energy consumption -- from heating buildings to
powering vehicles -- that generates waste heat release. The world's total
energy consumption in 2006 was equivalent to a constant-use rate of 16
terawatts (1 terawatt, or TW, equals 1 trillion watts). Of that, an average
rate of 6.7 TW was consumed in 86 metropolitan areas in the Northern
Hemisphere.
Using a computer model of the atmosphere, the authors found
that the influence of this waste heat can widen the jet stream.
"What
we found is that energy use from multiple urban areas collectively can warm the
atmosphere remotely, thousands of miles away from the energy consumption
regions," Zhang says. "This is accomplished through atmospheric
circulation change."
The
release of waste heat is different from energy that is naturally distributed in
the atmosphere, the researchers noted. The largest source of heat, solar
energy, warms Earth's surface and atmospheric circulations redistribute that
energy from one region to another. Human energy consumption distributes energy
that had lain dormant and sequestered for millions of years, mostly in the form
of oil or coal.
Though
the amount of human-generated energy is a small portion of that transported by
nature, it is highly concentrated in urban areas. In the Northern Hemisphere,
many of those urban areas lie directly under major atmospheric troughs and jet
streams.
"The
world's most populated and energy-intensive metropolitan areas are along the
east and west coasts of the North American and Eurasian continents, underneath
the most prominent atmospheric circulation troughs and ridges," Cai says.
"The release of this concentrated waste energy causes the noticeable
interruption to the normal atmospheric circulation systems above, leading to
remote surface temperature changes far away from the regions where waste heat
is generated."
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