Abstract
Extreme heat under global warming is a concerning issue for the growing
tropical population. However, model projections of extreme temperatures,
a widely used metric for extreme heat, are uncertain on regional scales.
In addition, humidity also needs to be taken into account in order to
estimate the health impact of extreme heat. Here we show that an
integrated temperature-humidity metric for the health impact of heat,
namely the extreme wet-bulb temperature (TW), is controlled by
established atmospheric dynamics and thus can be robustly projected on
regional scales. For each 1°C of tropical mean warming, global climate
models project extreme TW (the annual maximum of daily-mean or 3-hourly
values) to increase roughly uniformly between 20°S and 20°N latitude by
about 1°C. This projection is consistent with the theoretical
expectation based on tropical atmospheric dynamics, and observations
over the past 40 years, which gives confidence to the model projection.
For a 1.5°C warmer world, the likely (66 per cent confidence interval)
increase of regional extreme TW is projected to be 1.33-1.49°C, whereas
the uncertainty of projected extreme temperatures is 3.7 times as large.
These results suggest that limiting global warming to 1.5°C will prevent
most of the tropics from reaching a TW of 35°C, the limit of human
adaptation.