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Regional Heterogeneity and Warming Dominance in the contiguous United States

María Dolores Gadea Rivas and Jesús Gonzalo

UC3M Working papers. Economics from Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Departamento de Economía

Abstract: Climate change exhibits substantial variability across both space and time, requiring mitigation and adaptation strategies that effectively address challenges at global and local scales. Accurately capturing this variability is essential for assessing climate impacts, attributing underlying causes, and formulating effective policies. This study introduces simple yet robust quantitative methods to detect local warming, distinguish among different types of warming, and compare warming trends across contiguous U.S. states using the concept of warming dominance. In contrast to traditional approaches that focus solely on average temperatures, our analysis rigorously and systematically examines the entire distribution of daily temperatures for the contiguous United States from 1950 to 2021. The results reveal that, while 44% of states show no statistically significant warming based on average temperature trends, a much larger proportion—84%—exhibit warming when assessing various quantiles of the distribution. These findings underscore the substantial heterogeneity in warming patterns: some states, such as those located in the so-called “Warming Hole,” display no evidence of warming at any quantile; others experience more pronounced warming in either the lower or upper tails of the temperature distribution; and a few states show consistent warming across all quantiles. The study concludes by identifying which states exhibit warming dominance over others and which appear comparatively less affected. These insights are particularly important in the United States, where climate policy is formulated and implemented at both federal and state levels.

Keywords: Climate; change; Distributional; characteristics; Trends; Global; and; local; warming; Heterogeneous; climate; change; Warming; typology; Warming; dominance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C31 C32 Q54 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-09-08
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