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                    Section 1: Publication
                                
                Publication Type
                Journal Article
                                
                Authorship
                Rajulapati, C. R., Abdelmoaty, H. M., Nerantzaki, S. D., & Papalexiou, S. M.
                                
                Title
                Changes in the risk of extreme temperatures in megacities worldwide
                                
                Year
                2022
                                
                Publication Outlet
                Climate Risk Management, 36, 100433
                                
                DOI
                
                                
                ISBN
                
                                
                ISSN
                
                                
                Citation
                
                    Rajulapati, C. R., Abdelmoaty, H. M., Nerantzaki, S. D., & Papalexiou, S. M. (2022). Changes in the risk of extreme temperatures in megacities worldwide. Climate Risk Management, 36, 100433. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crm.2022.100433 
                Abstract
                
                    Globally, extreme temperatures have severe impacts on the economy, human health, food and water security, and ecosystems. Mortality rates have been increased due to heatwaves in several regions. Specifically, megacities have high impacts with the increasing temperature and ever-expanding urban areas; it is important to understand extreme temperature changes in terms of duration, magnitude, and frequency for future risk management and disaster mitigation. Here we framed a novel Semi-Parametric quantile mapping method to bias-correct the CMIP6 minimum and maximum temperature projections for 199 megacities worldwide. The changes in maximum and minimum temperature are quantified in terms of climate indices (ETCCDI and HDWI) for the four Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5, SSP3-7.0, and SSP5-8.5). Cities in northern Asia and northern North America (Kazan, Samara, Heihe, Montréal, Edmonton, and Moscow) are warming at a higher rate compared to the other regions. There is an increasing and decreasing trend for the warm and cold extremes respectively. Heatwaves increase exponentially in the future with the increase in warming, that is, from SSP1-2.6 to SSP5-8.5. Among the CMIP6 models, a huge variability is observed, and this further increases as the warming increases. All climate indices have steep slopes for the far future (2066–2100) compared to the near future (2031–2065). Yet the variability among CMIP6 models in near future is high compared to the far future for cold indices.
                
                                
                Plain Language Summary
                
                    
                
                 
                
                    Section 2: Additional Information
                                
    
        Program Affiliations
            
                                
    
        Project Affiliations
            
                                
    Submitters
            
                                
                Publication Stage
                Published
                                
                Theme
                
                                
                Presentation Format
                
                                
                Additional Information
                
                    Papalexiou, Simon-Michael , Refereed Publications