When an extreme weather event occurs, people often ask: is climate change to blame?
For decades, climate scientists have answered that question in general terms – that as the planet warms, we can expect many of these weather events to become more frequent and extreme.
But in recent years, advances in attribution science have allowed researchers to answer the question in much greater detail.
In 2014 Dr. Friederike Otto, Dr. Geert Jan van Oldenborgh and the non-profit Climate Central, serving as secretariat as well as helping to secure initial funding, founded World Weather Attribution (WWA).
Working with scientists around the world, WWA quantifies how climate change influences the intensity and likelihood of an extreme weather event in the immediate aftermath of the extreme event using weather observations and computer modelling. To encourage actions that will make communities and countries more resilient to future extreme weather events, WWA studies also evaluate how existing vulnerability worsened the impacts of the extreme weather event.
The results are made public as soon as they are available, often days or weeks after the event, to inform discussions about climate change and extreme weather.
For example, in July 2021, just 11 days after temperatures in Pacific northwest areas of the U.S. and Canada reached high above 40ºC, shattering records by as much as 5ºC, a WWA study found that climate change made the heatwave at least 150 times more likely and 2ºC more intense.
Since its inception in 2014, WWA has now performed more than 80 attribution studies on heatwaves, drought, wildfire, storms and extreme rainfall events around the world. The methods used have advanced over the years and have been published in the peer-reviewed scientific literature together with many of the studies of individual events.
WWA receives funding from the Grantham Institute, the European Climate Foundation and the Bezos Earth Foundation.
To contact World Weather Attribution, email wwamedia@imperial.ac.uk