A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003

© Taylor & Francis Group, LLC 2010. Ricardo Trigo and Ricardo García-Herrera received support from the Portuguese-Spanish integrated action (E-27/2005) funded by CRUP and MCYT and also from Gulbenkian Foundation through project IMPACTE (no. 1568). Erich Fischer was funded by the Swiss National C...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco, Díaz, J., Trigo, R.M., Luterbacher, J., Fischer, E.M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Inc 2010
Subjects:
52
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/43027
id ftunivcmadrid:oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/43027
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivcmadrid:oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/43027 2024-09-15T18:24:26+00:00 A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003 García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco Díaz, J. Trigo, R.M. Luterbacher, J. Fischer, E.M. 2010 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/43027 eng eng Taylor & Francis Inc E-27/2005 1568 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/43027 1064-3389 restricted access 52 Grape harvest dates Air-pollution Climate-change Model simulations Warning system Western-Europe French cities Hot summer Mortality Temperature Física atmosférica 2501 Ciencias de la Atmósfera journal article 2010 ftunivcmadrid https://doi.org/20.500.14352/43027 2024-08-29T23:43:41Z © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC 2010. Ricardo Trigo and Ricardo García-Herrera received support from the Portuguese-Spanish integrated action (E-27/2005) funded by CRUP and MCYT and also from Gulbenkian Foundation through project IMPACTE (no. 1568). Erich Fischer was funded by the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research on Climate (NCCR Climate). The authors would like to thank the ECMWF and NCEP/NCAR for providing their reanalysis data, and the Belgium institute VITO for providing the images from satellite VEGETATION. The authors would like to acknowledge Daniel Paredes, David Barriopedro, Bernardo Mota, José Miguel Cardoso Pereira, Célia Gouveia, and Martin Hirschi for all their comments and contribution to several figures. We also acknowledge the comments and suggests from the reviewers. This paper reviews the European summer heat wave of 2003, with special emphasis on the first half of August 2003, jointly with its significant societal and environmental impact across Western and Central Europe. We show the pattern of record-breaking temperature anomalies, discuss it in the context of the past, and address the role of the main contributing factors responsible for the occurrence and persistence of this event: blocking episodes, soil moisture deficit, and sea surface temperatures. We show that the anticyclonic pattern corresponds more to an anomalous northern displacement of the North Atlantic subtropical high than a canonical blocking structure, and that soil moisture deficit was a key factor to reach unprecedented temperature anomalies. There are indications that the anomalous Mediterranean Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) have contributed to the heat wave of 2003, whereas the role of SST anomalies in other oceanic regions is still under debate. There are methodological limitations to evaluate excess mortality due to excessive temperatures; however, the different studies available in the literature allow us to estimate that around 40,000 deaths were registered in Europe during the heat wave, mostly ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Docta Complutense (Universidad Complutense de Madrid - UCM)
institution Open Polar
collection Docta Complutense (Universidad Complutense de Madrid - UCM)
op_collection_id ftunivcmadrid
language English
topic 52
Grape harvest dates
Air-pollution
Climate-change
Model simulations
Warning system
Western-Europe
French cities
Hot summer
Mortality
Temperature
Física atmosférica
2501 Ciencias de la Atmósfera
spellingShingle 52
Grape harvest dates
Air-pollution
Climate-change
Model simulations
Warning system
Western-Europe
French cities
Hot summer
Mortality
Temperature
Física atmosférica
2501 Ciencias de la Atmósfera
García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco
Díaz, J.
Trigo, R.M.
Luterbacher, J.
Fischer, E.M.
A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
topic_facet 52
Grape harvest dates
Air-pollution
Climate-change
Model simulations
Warning system
Western-Europe
French cities
Hot summer
Mortality
Temperature
Física atmosférica
2501 Ciencias de la Atmósfera
description © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC 2010. Ricardo Trigo and Ricardo García-Herrera received support from the Portuguese-Spanish integrated action (E-27/2005) funded by CRUP and MCYT and also from Gulbenkian Foundation through project IMPACTE (no. 1568). Erich Fischer was funded by the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research on Climate (NCCR Climate). The authors would like to thank the ECMWF and NCEP/NCAR for providing their reanalysis data, and the Belgium institute VITO for providing the images from satellite VEGETATION. The authors would like to acknowledge Daniel Paredes, David Barriopedro, Bernardo Mota, José Miguel Cardoso Pereira, Célia Gouveia, and Martin Hirschi for all their comments and contribution to several figures. We also acknowledge the comments and suggests from the reviewers. This paper reviews the European summer heat wave of 2003, with special emphasis on the first half of August 2003, jointly with its significant societal and environmental impact across Western and Central Europe. We show the pattern of record-breaking temperature anomalies, discuss it in the context of the past, and address the role of the main contributing factors responsible for the occurrence and persistence of this event: blocking episodes, soil moisture deficit, and sea surface temperatures. We show that the anticyclonic pattern corresponds more to an anomalous northern displacement of the North Atlantic subtropical high than a canonical blocking structure, and that soil moisture deficit was a key factor to reach unprecedented temperature anomalies. There are indications that the anomalous Mediterranean Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) have contributed to the heat wave of 2003, whereas the role of SST anomalies in other oceanic regions is still under debate. There are methodological limitations to evaluate excess mortality due to excessive temperatures; however, the different studies available in the literature allow us to estimate that around 40,000 deaths were registered in Europe during the heat wave, mostly ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco
Díaz, J.
Trigo, R.M.
Luterbacher, J.
Fischer, E.M.
author_facet García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco
Díaz, J.
Trigo, R.M.
Luterbacher, J.
Fischer, E.M.
author_sort García Herrera, Ricardo Francisco
title A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
title_short A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
title_full A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
title_fullStr A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
title_full_unstemmed A Review of the European Summer Heat Wave of 2003
title_sort review of the european summer heat wave of 2003
publisher Taylor & Francis Inc
publishDate 2010
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/43027
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation E-27/2005
1568
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/43027
1064-3389
op_rights restricted access
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.14352/43027
_version_ 1810464793733103616