Not just a 'dry heat': why humidity is surging in Sask. this summer - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Not just a 'dry heat': why humidity is surging in Sask. this summer

Humidex values have climbed above 40 in some parts of Saskatchewan this July. So why are things so humid?

Climate change could mean higher humidex values on the Prairies

Swimmers and beachgoers at Regina Beach on a hot, summer day.
Swimmers have had plenty of opportunities to enjoy the cool waters of the province's lakes, as heat and humidity have been high this summer. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

Saskatchewan is known for its hot and dry summers.

But this summer, things haven't been so dry.

Humidex values during the last full week of July soared above 40 in parts of southern Saskatchewan.

Estevan reported 12 days this July with a humidex at or above 35. It usually sees about four or five days in a typical July.

Humidex a word that blends "humidity" and "index"measures how hot it feels when humidity is combined with temperature. The higher the humidity on a hot day, the hotter it actually feels.

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A humidex of 40 to 45, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada(ECCC), can cause "great discomfort" and it's recommended you avoid physical exertion.

Humidex is also a factor ECCC considers when issuing heat warnings. In roughly the southern half of the province, they're issued when the humidex exceeds 38 for two or more consecutive days;and in roughly the northern half, they're issued when it exceeds 34.

Water, water, everywhere

Humidity is the amount of water vapour or water in the form of a gas instead of a liquid in the air.

That water vapour is formed when water evaporates from the ground into the air.

And there's been plenty of water on the ground for that to happen, with much of the province receiving above-average moisture this spring and summer.

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The Prairies have seen quite a bit of rain this spring and it's making a dent in the ongoing drought. It's also keeping forest fires at bay.

On the Prairies, some amount of humidity is almost always guaranteed each summer when cropsgrow.

"They give off a tremendous amount of moisture called evapotranspiration," said Terry Lang, a meteorologist with ECCC.

"The past few years havebeen really, really dry and we know the crops haven't done really well so they haven't been giving off this evapotranspiration."

Lang said strong weather systems that originate off the coast of British Columbia and move through the Prairies in summernot only bring additional rain, but they also can drawin moist air from the Gulf of Mexico.

"It's also going across the (U.S.) Midwest which is also growing a lot of crops as well," she said.

Lang expectshumidityto drop in the coming weeksas crops are harvested.

Climate change could mean higher humidity: scientist

Don't expect this to be the last summer with high humidity.

Trevor Murdock is a climate scientist with the Canadian Centre for Climate Services. He said climate change will likely only increase humidity.

"Warmer air can hold more moisture," said Murdock.

"Climate change also is causing increased precipitation. And so the warm and potentially wetter events during the summer in the Prairies together are projected to bring increases in this humidex index that we use."

The Prairies are expected to see more intense drought and severe forest fireseasons as a result of climate change.

But the areacould also end up seeing more rain, too.

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Murdock said because warmer air can hold more moisture, rainfall events could become more intense.

"So you can get both an increase in the dry season, increase in the dry spells, but then when it rains, it pours," said Murdock.

"It sounds like these are potentially contradictory, but these are the kinds of changes in extremes of opposite kinds that climate change can drive."

Data from CBC News and the Canadian Centre for Climate Services shows Regina sees around five days a year with a humidex above 35. That number could jump to 29 days by the year 2071, even if greenhouse gas emissions fall off mid-century.

Things are not always as they seem

Despite a warming planet, some arid and semi-arid regions of the world which couldincludeSaskatchewanarenot getting more humid.

That research was presented in aJanuary report from the National Centerfor Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

Isla Simpson, the lead author of the study, told CBCthat water vapour levelsin places like the southwestern United States, South Africa and Australia have not increased in the last 40 years or so.

Isla Simpson, a scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., appears in a Zoom call.
Isla Simpson, a scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., says work is still underway to find out why arid and semi-arid regions are not seeing an increase in water vapour. (CBC News)

"Water vapour has stayed fairly constant on average in these arid and semi-arid regions even though temperatures have risen considerably," Simpson said.

Even in the driest months of more humid regions around the world, Simpson said water vapour is also not rising to the same extent that was expected.

The answer as to why is still a mystery. But Simpson and her team believe a main reasonis that climatemodels may be overestimating how much water is available tothe atmosphere in drier regions.

"Even if the atmosphere warms, maybe it's not able to get as much water as it wants from the surface because there just isn't enough available to it," she said.

Simpson stressed more researchis needed to find the answer.