
"Climate scientists have been attributing storms, droughts and heatwaves to global warming for two decades. Now, they are tracing the chain of responsibility all the way back to the producers of fossil fuels. A study published today in Nature shows that around one-quarter of the heatwaves recorded over 200023 can be directly linked to greenhouse-gas emissions from individual energy giants."
"The findings could provide fresh evidence to support lawsuits seeking to hold companies accountable for their impacts on the climate. I cannot as a scientist assign legal responsibilities for these events, says lead author Yann Quilcaille, a climate researcher at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland. What I can say is that each one of these carbon majors is contributing to heatwaves, making them more intense and also making them more likely."
"More than one-quarter of the 213 events recorded would have been virtually impossible without human-induced global warming, the study found. The emissions linked to energy companies and other major carbon emitters increased the likelihood of some 53 heatwaves by a factor of more than 10,000. This is not the first time that climate impacts have been attributed to fossil-fuel producers, but Quilcaille and his team go one step further than their predecessors and link individual companies directly to specific heatwaves."
Around one-quarter of heatwaves recorded since 2000 can be directly linked to greenhouse-gas emissions from individual energy companies. More than one-quarter of 213 recorded events would have been virtually impossible without human-induced global warming. Emissions tied to major carbon emitters increased the likelihood of about 53 heatwaves by factors exceeding 10,000. Individual fossil-fuel producers are contributing to heatwaves by making them more intense and more likely. Linking companies to specific events provides a line of evidence for climate-related litigation targeting particular extreme events. A US county has filed a US$52-billion suit alleging contribution to the 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave.
Read at www.nature.com
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