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Emitters linked to extreme temperatures
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Today’s newsletter looks at a new study connecting emissions from the world’s largest fossil fuel and cement companies to extreme weather events. You can read the full story on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe

What’s fueling heat waves

By Coco Liu and Eric Roston

One quarter of more than 200 heat waves that occurred worldwide this century may have been impossible without human-induced global warming. Emissions from the world’s largest fossil fuel and cement companies played a significant role in worsening those events, according to a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

The study is the first to assess the historic impact of climate change on a large series of heat waves. The scientists concluded that emissions from the world’s 180 largest carbon emitters contributed to about half of the increase in intensity of heat waves since preindustrial times. They further determined that 14 of the largest carbon majors, including Exxon Mobil Corp., Saudi Aramco and Gazprom PJSC, played a role in more than 50 heat waves that otherwise would have been almost impossible.

While past studies have mostly looked at emissions from regions and countries, this review focuses on major carbon emitters, said Yann Quilcaille, the report’s lead author and a postdoctoral researcher at ETH Zurich.

“This research is an important step towards accountability,” says Friederike Otto, a professor in climate science at the Imperial College London who wasn’t involved in the study.

Residents watch a wildfire burning during a heat wave in Castrillo de Cabrera, northwestern Spain, on Aug. 16. Photographer: Cesar Manso/AFP/Getty Images

Otto is co-founder of World Weather Attribution, a scientific group that pioneered extreme event analysis and whose approach is adopted by the authors of the new study. The latest findings come as the number of climate lawsuits against polluters has surged in recent years, while citizens, communities and states seeking justice have often struggled to prove their case in court.

To help bridge the knowledge gap, scientists are stepping up their efforts to use climate attribution research to examine a wider range of extreme weather events and connect them to specific actors. Earlier this year, a study published in Nature found that Saudi Aramco and Gazprom were each responsible for about $2 trillion of lost global economic growth from extreme heat.

Saudi Aramco declined to comment, while Gazprom and Exxon Mobil haven’t responded to requests for comment.

A growing body of scientific evidence is “opening the door to hold fossil fuel companies responsible” for the harm that their businesses have caused to communities and ecosystems worldwide, Otto said.

An Exxon Mobil Corp. refinery at the Port of Rotterdam in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Photographer: Peter Boer/Bloomberg

In an accompanying essay published in Nature, Karsten Haustein, a Leipzig University climate scientist not involved in the study, wrote that it “is another reminder that denial and anti-science rhetoric won’t make climate liability go away, nor will it reduce the ever-increasing risk to life from heat waves across our planet.”

While heat waves are still considered a natural weather phenomenon, greenhouse gas pollution is making them worse and more frequent. The added heat over time worsens wildfires, droughts, hurricanes and rainfall. Sizzling temperatures also can damage infrastructure, wreak havoc on productivity and increase the health hazards for people. In 2022, heat waves caused more than 60,000 premature deaths across Europe. 

To calculate how climate change affects the likelihood and intensity of heat waves, the study’s authors analyzed 213 heat waves between 2000 and 2023 that caused significant social and economic disruptions. As WWA does in their analyses of individual events, the researchers used computer models to simulate how the heat waves would have unfolded under a preindustrial climate, compared with current times.

Their findings show that global warming has made heat waves more likely and more intense, and the situation has worsened over time. To be more specific, the heat waves became 20 times more likely between 2000 and 2009, compared with the preindustrial period between 1850 and 1900, and as much as 200 times more likely between 2010 and 2019.

For more details on the researchers’ analysis, read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

Fanning the flames

40x
Climate change made the extreme weather conditions that fueled the wildfires in Portugal and Spain this summer about 40 times more likely to happen, according to World Weather Attribution. 

Turning up the heat

"Heat stress is not a new problem. It's just now it's more in our face, it's part of our lives."
Glen Kenny
University of Ottawa physiologist
Kenny and his fellow researchers are simulating heat waves in sealed environmental chambers to improve understanding of how high temperatures can damage the human body.

More from Green

Months after the smoke from California’s destructive fires cleared from LA skies, residents are still reckoning with a toxic stew of smoke pollutants left behind, with effects on human health poorly understood. Without federal and local standards on how to deal with contaminants like arsenic and the carcinogen benzene, dozens of researchers and private specialists are combing through yards and homes, work that goes beyond authorities' post-fire testing. 

“‘What are we facing? What are we exposed to? Is it safe?’ We hear these questions all the time,” said Yifang Zhu, a professor at the University of California at Los Angeles’s public health school who’s been measuring pollution related to the fires since early this year. “This knowledge and new insights will be very helpful for the future.”

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

Yifang Zhu, left, and a postdoctoral researcher collect pillows at a home in the Pacific Palisades. Photographer: Alex Welsh

California lawmakers have reached an agreement to boost the state’s wildfire utility fund by around $18 billion with contributions spread out over the next two decades, according to legislation filed on Wednesday.

The US Energy Department has disbanded the group behind a contrarian climate report. The report by the agency’s Climate Working Group downplayed the severity of global warming, prompting pushback from other scientists. 

Australia’s second-largest pension has invested almost A$1 billion ($660 million) in a climate fund run by Macquarie Group Ltd. The fund includes global and domestic assets such as Aula Energy, which has renewable energy projects throughout Australia.

Data check

For the first time ever, China’s annual electric car sales will exceed the total of all new passenger vehicles driven away from dealers in the US, according to the latest research by BloombergNEF, with the gap set to widen in 2026.

“The Chinese EV market has three things going for it: competitively priced EVs, the world’s largest charging network and willing buyers,” said Andrew Grant, BNEF’s head of intelligent mobility. “It is one country where an electric vehicle is cheaper to buy than a conventional combustion vehicle.”

Worth a listen

You’ve heard about Formula 1, right? But do you know about Formula E, its plucky all-electric sibling? This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi talks with Sylvain Filippi, co-founder and chief technology officer of Envision Racing, about why the world needs an electric racing series, how Formula E is improving the experience for consumer electric cars, and why he’s not too concerned about the US backlash against EVs.

Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

Formula E Gen3 race cars at the start of the Formula E Tokyo E-Prix in Tokyo in March 2024.  Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg

Live with Bloomberg Green

Bloomberg Green New York: Join us Sept. 25 for a solutions-focused look into a new era of climate action during Climate Week NYC. Following the 80th United Nations General Assembly, we’ll hear how top leaders in business, finance and government are approaching climate issues during times of geopolitical uncertainty. Learn more here.

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  • CityLab Daily for top stories, ideas and solutions, from cities around the world
  • Tech In Depth for analysis and scoops about the business of technology

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