Study finds dramatic increase in concurrent droughts, heat waves Droughts and heat waves are happening simultaneously with much greater frequency than in the past, according to research by climate experts at the University of California, Irvine. Their findings appear in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A team from UCI Center for Hydrometeorology & Remote Sensing examined data gathered from ground sensors and gauges during a 50-year period beginning in 1960. Applying a statistical analysis to the half-century data set, the researchers observed a significant increase in concurrent droughts and heat waves. Heat waves can kill people and crops while worsening air quality, and droughts exacerbate those serious impacts, said senior author Amir AghaKouchak, assistant professor of civil & environmental engineering. With these two extremes happening at the same time, the threat is far more significant. For the purposes of the study, heat waves were defined as three to seven consecutive hot days, with temperatures in the 90th percentile of the historical record. Droughts were described as extended periods during which precipitation was 20 percent or less of the norm, as measured by the Standardized Precipitation Index. While the researchers did not look into human-caused global climate change in this study, Agha Kouchak said, an overall increase in the mean temperature worldwide is raising the probability of heat waves. He cited the recent record-breaking high in Iran: NASA satellites and National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration data sets documented a 115-degree Fahrenheit surface temperature with a comfort index of 165 degrees on July 31 in the city of Bandar-e Mahshahr. More than 2,500 people died during a heat wave that gripped India in late May. A European heat wave in 2003 claimed about 70,000 victims, many of them seniors and children.