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Ranking heat waves like hurricanes is being proposed in California

<i>Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images</i><br/>Matthew Bautista
Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag
Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Matthew Bautista

By Allison Chinchar, CNN Meteorologist

Heat waves are the deadliest weather disaster in the US. They account for nearly 150 fatalities per year, more than hurricanes and tornadoes combined.

New legislation in California hopes to reduce heat-related deaths by ranking heat waves similarly to hurricanes, by using categories and names. However, the National Weather Service (NWS) is currently in a multiyear experiment to also categorize heat waves.

“Globally, people are suffering from heat because of a deadly awareness gap,” said Kurt Shickman, the director of Extreme Heat Initiatives at the Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center (Arsht-Rock), which is helping lead the legislative action.

“On one hand, there is still a low level of awareness of the risks of heat illness and death. People simply don’t think of themselves as vulnerable. And on the other hand, heat quietly kills about half a million people per year globally, making it the deadliest natural disaster we face.”

Both the NWS and the groups behind the new measures are working to fix the deadly awareness gap.

Legislation to save lives

The new legislation proposed in California is in the form of two separate bills with one goal, to create a statewide heat ranking system, similar to the Saffir-Simpson scale used for hurricanes, to better prepare the public.

Assembly Bill 2238 is tightly focused on preparing and safeguarding people from heat,” Shickman said. “Assembly Bill 2076 covers a broad set of heat efforts that will result in better heat resilience and mitigation.”

The bills would establish a Chief Heat Officer role, create an interagency heat task force and an extreme heat advisory council.

Shickman added there have also been discussions about naming heat waves.

“Putting a name to a heat wave is [supported] by studies on human behavior, psychology, and finding the right trigger to spur action to prepare for an extreme heat event,” Shickman noted.

Naming extreme temperature events could begin as early as this summer.

“Athens, Greece and Seville, Spain, are the first two cities globally to pilot heat wave naming and categorization beginning on May 1, 2022,” Shickman pointed out. Arsht-Rock fully anticipates other cities, including those in the US, to similarly follow suit in the coming years.

The bill also wants to categorize the heat waves into a simple numerical system.

“For example, people and authorities prepare and take action very differently when facing an imminent Category 1 versus a Category 5 hurricane,” Shickman explained. “This bill would give us the same capacity to encourage safer citizens in a similar way when facing heat.”

He argued there is merit to the effort because social scientists have noted humans tend to do better at deciphering simple messages rather than complex ones containing too many words.

“It’s important to make information easily accessible, easily digestible, and actionable,” said Makenzie Krocak, a research scientist for the University of Oklahoma Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis. “People are much more consistent about interpreting numbers. That doesn’t necessarily mean that they are more likely to respond, but it does mean that interpretation is more consistent from person to person.”

However, the new categories and names would not necessarily come directly from the NWS, as weather information usually does.

Instead, the legislation charges California’s EPA for the naming and categorizing of the heat waves, but the NWS would provide the raw weather data to the EPA and would be the conduit for any of their warnings or messaging.

“We’ve made a great effort to design and pilot a categorization process for heat events that would work smoothly with the NWS process,” Shickman said. “We see categorization and the inclusion of human health outcomes as enhancements to a good warning system, not a replacement for it.”

Though Shickman also pointed out, “We are not currently working with the National Weather Service, but would very much like to collaborate in the future.”

A similar system is currently in place

The NWS has its own experimental “HeatRisk tool” currently in place.

The tool provides a quick view of heat risk potential over the upcoming seven days, categorizing the heat both numerically (0-4) and with a color (green/yellow/orange/red/magenta), along with identifying groups potentially most at risk at each level.

“Using this HeatRisk tool, we are able to move away from hard temperature thresholds and toward societal impacts when making decisions surrounding heat advisories, watches, and warnings.” meteorologist Jenn Varian at the NWS office in Las Vegas said.

Similarly, Shickman noted one of the main goals of the legislation is to “establish categories for heat waves, based on how dangerous they are estimated to be for human health.”

The NWS developed the HeatRisk program in order to better assess the risks and allow people to prepare for upcoming heat events.

“We developed these categories based on climatology, but also based on collaborative work we’ve done with the CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention],” said Paul Iñiguez, a Science and Operations Officer at the NWS office in Phoenix.

Through collaboration, they were able to determine the yearly death toll caused by heat stroke and heat exhaustion.

“From there we were able to determine threshold temperatures of when you start to see impacts, the worse impacts from the heat, and that is how we determined our yellow level threshold,” Iñiguez explained.

Iñiguez and his colleagues surveyed several hundred locations across the country, then mapped the results to show the varied thresholds across the entire country.

“Just last year in Maricopa County, where Phoenix is located, there were 330 heat-related deaths,” Iñiguez pointed out. “And as we know with climate change, locations are warming up. Phoenix and the Southwest are showing a drastic increase in temperature trends.”

The program was developed nearly 10 years ago and became utilized in regional policy five years ago, Iñiguez said.

However, it is still in its experimental phase and will not become fully operational for another few years, which may line up with the timeline California wants to use.

They would like their program to begin January 1, 2024, according to the legislation.

Heat is relative to where you live

An important thing to note is a number scale alone does not tell the whole story.

“As we’ve seen with hurricanes, the Saffir-Simpson scale only takes into account wind speed and not storm surge or flooding, and that causes some of the most damage from hurricanes, but that’s not included in the category scale at all,” said Dr. Peter D. Howe, an associate professor of geography at Utah State University.

“What I hope is these [new EPA] warnings take into account all possible dimensions of a heat event, so not just temperature but also humidity, the duration of the event, and nighttime low temperatures, things we know really cause a lot of the most serious health impacts.”

California is geographically complex, as the topography and climatology vary widely from one end of the state to the other.

Both the highest elevation point and the lowest elevation point in the contiguous US are in California; Mount Whitney and Badwater Basin, respectively.

“Death Valley regularly exceeds 115 degrees in the summer, but areas like Mount Whitney do not,” Varian said. “So elevation, the type of terrain out West, and even the time of year play a major role in how we issue these excessive heat warnings.”

A few western NWS offices also take into account the number of tourists coming to the city and the transient population unaccustomed to extreme desert heat.

It could also be an issue if the system were to be implemented across other states.

For example, in Columbia, South Carolina, the heat index must reach at least 110 degrees in order to have a heat advisory issued. However, in Minneapolis, a heat advisory is issued when the heat index only reaches 95 degrees.

What is considered extreme heat in one city may be a normal summer day in another.

“100 degrees in Chicago is obviously going to be a much bigger deal, Iñiguez said. “In Phoenix, 100 degrees in July is actually going to be a below-normal day, so it’s not going to be as drastically different to the climatology.”

What it all boils down to is how best to protect the public from various heat-related illnesses.

Howe stressed communication and education will also be paramount. Media will need to communicate the new scale and educators will need to teach it to students, so they understand what it means.

It may not matter what type of method they use, such as numbers, colors, or names, but rather the way they effectively communicate the new system.

“I think the main challenge is going to be making sure this system is used across the spectrum of people who are using it,” Howe said. “From broadcast meteorologists to local health departments, other local and state level folks such as the National Weather Service.”

Research shows messaging needs to be repeated early and often in order to be effective.

The-CNN-Wire
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CNN Meteorologist Haley Brink contributed to this story

Article Topic Follows: CNN-Weather/Environment

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