Spatiotemporal Distribution of Heatwave Hazards in Chinese Mainland for
the Period 1990-2019
Abstract
Heatwaves occurred frequently in summers, severely harming natural
environment and human society. While a few long-term spatiotemporal
heatwave studies have been conducted in China at the grid scale, their
shortcomings involve discrete distribution and poor spatiotemporal
continuity. We used daily data of 691 meteorological stations to obtain
torridity index (TI) and heatwave index (HWI) datasets (0.01°), to
evaluate the spatiotemporal distribution of heatwaves in Chinese
mainland for 1990-2019. The results were as follows: (1) TI rose but
with fluctuations. The largest increase occurred in North China in July.
Areas with hazard levels of medium and above accounted for 22.16%,
mainly in the eastern and southern provinces of China, South Tibet, East
and South Xinjiang, and Chongqing. The hazard indicators in Chongqing
and central Zhejiang were at especially high levels, which is
concerning. (2) Average heatwave frequency, intensity, and duration
reached relatively high levels of 6-8, 20-25, and 11-16, respectively,
in East and South Xinjiang and Southeast Tibet. (3) The study areas were
divided into four categories according to the spatiotemporal
distribution of hazards. The “high hazard and rapidly increasing” and
“low hazard and keep increasing” areas accounted for 8.71% and
41.33%, respectively. (4) The proportions of units with significantly
increased average hazard (AH) at city and county levels were 57% and
68%, respectively. Jinhua, Zhengzhou, Nanchang, Wuhan, Shaoxing,
Changsha, Shijiazhuang, Nanjing, Wuxi, and Changzhou accounted for the
top 10 AH among the 49 first-tier, new first-tier, and second-tier
cities. “Ten Furnaces” at the top of the provincial capitals were
Zhengzhou, Nanchang, Wuhan, Changsha, Shijiazhuang, Nanjing, Hangzhou,
Haikou, Chongqing, and Hefei. Suzhou’s AH rose the fastest. While the
strategy of west development and of revitalizing northeast China
progressed, and the urbanization level and population aging of developed
areas were further developed, the continuously increasing heatwave
hazard should be fully considered.