On the stationarity of the global spatial dependency of heat risk on drought
Land surface processes such as the soil moisture—air temperature coupling influence compound
climate anomalies like heatwaves and droughts, yet the spatial and temporal variability of the coupling strength
is still understudied. We assess global land exposure to concurrent heat waves and drought since the 1980s. We
found that drought significantly shapes the spatial distribution of the risk of heat waves. We show that the
portion of global land experiencing drought‐conditioned heat anomalies more than tripled in less than 3 decades.
However, using such traditional heat waves indicators, the level of spatial coupling between heat waves and
drought seems to decline. Conversely, time‐dependent approaches accounting for the baseline climate change
offer a more stable perspective. We conclude that tailoring hazard definitions to specific processes and impacts
is crucial. Early warning systems can play a prominent role in mitigating the impacts of global warming to
society.
ZAMPIERI Matteo;
ASHOK Karumuri;
TORETI Andrea;
BAVERA Davide;
HOTEIT Ibrahim;
2024-11-27
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
JRC137356
0094-8276 (online),
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC137356,
10.1029/ 2024GL111117 (online),
Additional supporting files
| File name | Description | File type | |