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April 23, 2025

From boiling hot to freezing cold: Sudden flips in temperature set to increase with climate change

A conceptual diagram for local physical processes of temperature flips. Credit: Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58544-5
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A conceptual diagram for local physical processes of temperature flips. Credit: Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58544-5

Rapid temperature flips from hot to cold extremes have increased across the world, according to a new study in Nature Communications. These flips, which may negatively impact ecosystems and human health, are projected to further increase under global warming in most areas of the world by the end of the century, posing a particular danger for low-income countries.

Rapid temperature flips are sudden shifts in temperature from extreme warm to extreme cold or vice versa. Due to limited time to adapt to rapid temperature shifts, flips in either direction are likely to amplify the negative consequences of independent warm and cold extremes on societal and natural systems, affecting human and animal health, infrastructure, vegetation and agriculture.

Although there is growing literature on independent extreme warm or extreme cold climate events, little is known about the wider effects of rapid shifts between the two.

Ming Luo and colleagues analyzed data of temperature flips, an of one above to below the within five days, at a global scale between the years 1961 and 2023. Observable data were combined with and used to investigate long-term trends, as well as projected future changes until the end of the 21st century under different climate change scenarios.

More than 60% of the global regions included in the analysis have experienced an increase in frequency, intensity, and transition speed of temperature flips since 1961. The largest increases were seen in South America, West Europe, Africa, and South and Southeast Asia.

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Under high-emission scenarios (SSP 5.0–8.5 and SSP 3.0–7.0, in which continue to rise during the 21st century), temperature flips are projected to increase in intensity and duration between 2071 to 2100, with decreased duration of the transitions between the two extremes.

The authors predict that global population exposure to temperature flips could increase by more than 100% under the SSP 3.0–7.0 scenario, with expected to experience the greatest increase in exposure to rapid temperature flips, 4–6 times larger than the global average.

However, projections with low-medium emission scenarios (SSP 2–4.45 and SSP1–2.6, in which emissions are eventually reduced) indicate that global exposure increases could be limited through actions to reduce global emissions and associated warming.

The authors suggest that the adaptive capacity for temperature flips needs to be enhanced everywhere in the world, but even more so in developing countries with large populations.

More information: Sijia Wu et al, Rapid flips between warm and cold extremes in a warming world, Nature Communications (2025).

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by Sun Yat-sen University

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Sudden temperature flips—rapid shifts of at least one standard deviation above or below the mean within five days—have increased in frequency, intensity, and speed globally since 1961, especially in South America, West Europe, Africa, and South/Southeast Asia. Projections indicate further increases, particularly under high-emission scenarios, with low-income countries facing the greatest exposure. Reducing emissions could limit these risks.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.