(Press-News.org) Deadly hotter and longer heatwaves, which worsen in severity the longer it takes to reach net zero carbon emissions, will become the norm predicts new climate research.
Published in Environmental Research: Climate, researchers at the ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather and CSIRO used climate modelling and supercomputers to understand how heatwaves will respond over the next 1,000 years, after the world reaches net zero carbon emissions.
They chose a range of dates between 2030 and 2060 and calculated the long-term difference in heatwaves for each five-year delay in reaching net zero.
University of Melbourne Dr Andrew King, who co-authored the paper, said throughout all scenarios, the longer net zero is delayed, the higher the occurrence of historically rare and extreme heatwave events.
“This is particularly problematic for countries nearer the equator, which are generally more vulnerable, and where a heatwave event that breaks current historical records can be expected at least once every year or more often if net zero is delayed until 2050 or later,” Dr King said.
The study showed heatwaves as systematically hotter, longer and more frequent the longer net zero is delayed. Heatwaves may even be exacerbated by long-term warming in the Southern Ocean even after net zero is reached.
Most trends in the data showed no decline over the entire 1,000 years of each simulation, indicating that heatwaves do not start to revert towards preindustrial conditions even when net zero is reached, for at least a millennium. Some regions even displayed heatwaves of significantly increasing severity when net zero occurs by 2050 or later.
Professor Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick from the Australian National University and lead author said the work challenges a general belief that conditions after net zero will begin to improve for future generations.
“While our results are alarming, they provide a vital glimpse of the future, allowing effective and permanent adaptation measures to be planned and implemented,” Professor Perkins-Kirkpatrick said.
“It is still vitally important we make rapid progress to permanent net zero, and reaching global net zero by 2040 at the latest will be important to minimise the heatwaves severity.”
Dr King said the findings call for immediate action on reducing emissions and planning for adaptation.
“Investment in public infrastructure, housing, and health services to keep people cool and healthy during extreme heat will very likely look quite different in terms of scale, cost and the resources required under earlier versus later net zero stabilisation. This adaptation process is going to be the work of centuries, not decades,” Dr King said.
END
Deadly, record-breaking heatwaves will persist for 1,000 years, even under net zero
Deadly hotter and longer heatwaves, which worsen in severity the longer it takes to reach net zero carbon emissions, will become the norm predicts new climate research.
2025-11-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Maps created by 1960s schoolchildren provide new insights into habitat losses
2025-11-20
A new study of 1960s maps, many of which were created by young people, has provided important fresh evidence of the timing and extent of habitat losses caused by agricultural intensification and urban growth in England and Wales.
Prior to the analysis by the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), there were gaps in understanding about how our landscape gradually changed in the intervening years between the 1930s and 1990.
The 1960s survey involved 3,000 volunteers – many of them schoolchildren and students – marking maps with different colours and shadings, corresponding to a type of land cover such ...
Cool comfort: beating the heat with high-tech clothes
2025-11-20
As global temperatures rise and heatwaves intensify, a new textile innovation co-developed by University of South Australia scientists promises to keep people cooler, drier, and more comfortable in extreme heat.
Partnering with researchers from Zhengzhou University in China, UniSA materials scientist Professor Jun Ma has helped to create a lightweight breathable fabric that reflects 96% of the sun’s rays in outdoor conditions.
The moisture-wicking composite fabric is described in the journal Nano Research.
In outdoor field tests, the new textile lowered skin temperature by 2 degrees celsius under direct sunlight ...
New study reveals how China can cut nitrogen pollution while safeguarding national food security
2025-11-20
A new study published in Nitrogen Cycling presents the most comprehensive assessment to date of how China can reduce nationwide nitrogen pollution while continuing to meet the rising food demands of its population. The research analyzes nearly six decades of data and concludes that smarter nitrogen management could reduce fertilizer use by more than one third, significantly improving air and water quality without compromising crop yields.
Nitrogen fertilizers have played a central role in feeding China since the 1960s, supporting ...
Two thirds of women experience too much or too little weight gain in pregnancy
2025-11-20
Around two-thirds (68%) of pregnancies have weight gain that is more or less than recommended and that is associated with complications such as preterm birth, large birth weight, and admission to intensive care, finds a review of data from 1.6 million women published by The BMJ today.
These findings reinforce the need for international standards for healthy GWG alongside lifestyle support and public health measures to improve outcomes for mothers and babies worldwide, say lead researchers Helene Teede and Rebecca Godstein.
Gaining too much or too ...
Thousands of NHS doctors trapped in insecure “gig economy” contracts
2025-11-20
Thousands of locally employed doctors (LEDs) - many of them international graduates and from ethnic minority backgrounds - are trapped on insecure NHS contracts with no access to training, career progression, or national safeguards, reveals an investigation published by The BMJ today.
LEDs are the fastest growing group of doctors in the UK, driven mostly by those who graduated outside the UK. From 2019 to 2023, the number of LEDs in England and Wales rocketed by 75% to 36,831 doctors.
Freedom of Information (FoI) data obtained by The BMJ show that almost nine in 10 UK acute trusts use local contracts - some dating back as far as 2002 without ...
Two thirds of women gain too much or too little weight in pregnancy: Global study
2025-11-20
Key points
Higher and lower than recommended gestational weight gain is associated with increased pregnancy complications
Support is needed to improve health for women across the globe
Findings may help inform global standards for healthy weight gain in pregnancy
Around two-thirds of pregnancies have weight gain that is more or less than recommended and is associated with complications such as preterm birth, large birth weight, and admission to intensive care.
The findings are part of a Monash University-led systematic review of data from 1.6 million women, published by The BMJ.
Gaining too much or too little weight during pregnancy, known as gestational ...
Livestock manure linked to the rapid spread of hidden antibiotic resistance threats in farmland soils
2025-11-20
Large-scale livestock farming is accelerating the spread of antibiotic resistance and heavy metal contamination in agricultural soils at a pace and scale that poses new risks to global food safety and public health, new research reveals. Scientists have uncovered how even “low-risk” organic fertilizers like dried poultry manure can inadvertently drive a dramatic surge in dangerous antibiotic resistance genes, once released into vegetable plots used for food crops.
The peer-reviewed study, published this week in Biocontaminant, focused on ...
National Women’s Soccer League launches Hands-Only CPR effort, led by player Savy King
2025-11-20
DALLAS, Nov. 19, 2025 — National Women’s Soccer League and Angel City FC defender Savy King are teaming up with the American Heart Association on a groundbreaking league-wide initiative to equip all NWSL 16 teams with the lifesaving skills of Hands-Only cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and automatic external defibrillator (AED) education. The initiative aims to empower players, staff and coaches with the knowledge and confidence to act in a cardiac emergency. The initiative was announced tonight at the NWSL Awards ceremonies in San Jose, California and broadcast on ...
School accountability yields long-term gains for students
2025-11-20
A University of California, Riverside-led study shows that holding underperforming schools accountable can yield life-changing benefits for their most vulnerable students.
The research, led by UCR economist and professor Ozkan Eren, found that when high schools receive the state’s lowest performance rating—and are subsequently compelled to make changes—students are significantly less likely to have run-ins with law enforcement later in life.
“In terms of long-run criminal involvement, we find that if the school has a ...
Half of novelists believe AI is likely to replace their work entirely, research finds
2025-11-20
Just over half (51%) of published novelists in the UK believe that artificial intelligence is likely to end up entirely replacing their work as fiction writers, a new University of Cambridge report shows.
Close to two-thirds (59%) of novelists say they know their work has been used to train AI large language models (LLMs) without permission or payment.
Over a third (39%) of novelists say their income has already taken a hit from generative AI, for example due to loss of other work that facilitates novel writing. Most (85%) novelists expect their future ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Low-temperature-activated deployment of smart 4D-printed vascular stents
Clinical relevance of brain functional connectome uniqueness in major depressive disorder
For dementia patients, easy access to experts may help the most
YouTubers love wildlife, but commenters aren't calling for conservation action
New study: Immune cells linked to Epstein-Barr virus may play a role in MS
AI tool predicts brain age, cancer survival, and other disease signals from unlabeled brain MRIs
Peak mental sharpness could be like getting in an extra 40 minutes of work per day, study finds
No association between COVID-vaccine and decrease in childbirth
AI enabled stethoscope demonstrated to be twice as efficient at detecting valvular heart disease in the clinic
Development by Graz University of Technology to reduce disruptions in the railway network
Large study shows scaling startups risk increasing gender gaps
Scientists find a black hole spewing more energy than the Death Star
A rapid evolutionary process provides Sudanese Copts with resistance to malaria
Humidity-resistant hydrogen sensor can improve safety in large-scale clean energy
Breathing in the past: How museums can use biomolecular archaeology to bring ancient scents to life
Dementia research must include voices of those with lived experience
Natto your average food
Family dinners may reduce substance-use risk for many adolescents
Kumamoto University Professor Kazuya Yamagata receives 2025 Erwin von Bälz Prize (Second Prize)
Sustainable electrosynthesis of ethylamine at an industrial scale
A mint idea becomes a game changer for medical devices
Innovation at a crossroads: Virginia Tech scientist calls for balance between research integrity and commercialization
Tropical peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions
From cytoplasm to nucleus: A new workflow to improve gene therapy odds
Three Illinois Tech engineering professors named IEEE fellows
Five mutational “fingerprints” could help predict how visible tumours are to the immune system
Rates of autism in girls and boys may be more equal than previously thought
Testing menstrual blood for HPV could be “robust alternative” to cervical screening
Are returning Pumas putting Patagonian Penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood
Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests
[Press-News.org] Deadly, record-breaking heatwaves will persist for 1,000 years, even under net zeroDeadly hotter and longer heatwaves, which worsen in severity the longer it takes to reach net zero carbon emissions, will become the norm predicts new climate research.