Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
People enjoying the summer weather in Oosterpark in Amsterdam, 23 June 2019
People enjoying the summer weather in Oosterpark in Amsterdam, 23 June 2019 - Credit: Photo: NL Times
Nature
Crowther Lab
Tom Crowther
Jean-Francois Bastin
Climate change
global warming
Amsterdam
Rotterdam
The Hague
Thursday, 11 July 2019 - 10:10

Share this article:

Dutch cities to have same warm climate as Paris by 2050: study

By 2050 the climate in Amsterdam,, The Hague and Rotterdam will be comparable to what Paris has today, according to an analysis by scientists from Crowther Lab, which forms part of the ETH Zuirch university. According to the researchers, 77 percent of the world's cities will see a "striking change" in climate by 2050.

Europe will have both warmer summers and winters, with summer temperatures increasing 3.5 degrees and winter temperatures 4.7 degrees, according to the scientists. 22 percent of places will even see circumstances that currently don't exist in large cities. "The climate in London in 2050 will be comparable to the climate now in Barcelona, Madrid with Marrakesh, Moscow with Sofia", they said. Maximums during the hottest month in Amsterdam will likely be 3.4 degrees higher in 2050 than today.

According to scientist Tom Crowther, precisely measuring the effects of climate change is no longer the biggest challenge in climate science. The biggest challenge now is to get people to visualize the concrete effects on their daily lives, so that they can take action, he said according to ANP. The scientists hope that their study will help achieve this.

"History has repeatedly shown that data and facts alone are not enough to make people change their minds or encourage the to take action", lead research Jean-Francois Bastin said, according to the news wire. The current climate change reports do not adequately reflect the acute nature of the problem, he believes. "For example, it is difficult to visualize how a temperature rise of 2 degrees, or changes in the average temperature in 2100, can affect daily life."

More like this

Image
A map showing the environmental zones taking effect in Amsterdam on 1 January 2025. The green is an emission-free zone for all commercial vehicles and vans, the red bans the most polluting diesel engines
Dutch cities pushing through with no-emission zones despite new coalition's disapproval
Image
Amsterdam homes over a canal
Number of Dutch homes worth more than €1 million jump 22% to 273,000 last year
Image
Old houses in Amsterdam.
Over 100 Dutch municipalities investigating large-scale WWII Jewish property seizures
Image
Mayor Halsema with all Amsterdammers and Weesp residents who received a royal honour, April 24, 2026.
More than 3,300 awarded Royal honors on Friday; Rotterdam leading, gender gap narrowing
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Group files complaint over app FLO collecting sexual activity, pregnancy intentions info
  • Dutch lawmakers urge regulator to reject higher grid fees during peak hours
  • Experts dispute whether teen killed in 2020 crash was moved to ditch by a third party
  • Kids Top 20 returns to TV with AI presenter, without disclaimer that “she” isn’t real
  • Heat strokes at marathons: Runners sick in Amersfoort, Utrecht, Houten; two reanimated

Top stories

  • Heat strokes at marathons: Runners sick in Amersfoort, Utrecht, Houten; two reanimated
  • Heat emergency declared at Groningen Marathon after several runners fall ill
  • Body found in residential garden after passenger jumps from hot air balloon over Zundert
  • Unusually early heat in Netherlands gives way to cooler start of June
  • Police seek "older man in blue shirt" after fatal rail accident near Twello

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content