Mercury (Hobart)

Insurance in the firing line as global heat records tumble

The results are in — the world has had the warmest four years on record, writes Peter Boyer

- Peter Boyer, who began his journalism career at the Mercury, specialise­s in the science and politics of climate change.

LAST week saw the release of the last of the 2018 reports from the institutio­ns that take Earth’s temperatur­e. Their unanimous diagnosis: we are running a high fever, with worse to come.

All the world’s big public bodies assessing global data – the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on and government agencies in the United States, Japan and Europe – have determined that 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 were the warmest four years since records began in the 1800s.

The main data repositori­es are the UK’s Met Office and Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, Copernicus (European Union), NASA and the National Climate Data Center (US) and Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency.

Berkeley Earth, a privately funded research centre in California, offers an independen­t non-government assessment. Despite a wide disparity in data sources and methodolog­ies, the findings of all sources correlate closely. All show strong warming since the late 1970s, with notable rises in the late 1990s and in the past seven years.

Last year was generally ranked fourth among the four hottest years, but that was little consolatio­n considerin­g all of them were well above everything that had gone before.

Berkeley Earth pointed out that in a stable climate just 2.5 per cent of Earth’s surface would typically experience very high temperatur­es. In 2018 that figure stood at 44 per cent.

The year saw new temperatur­e records set in the north Atlantic, Europe and the eastern Mediterran­ean, the western Pacific including parts of New Zealand and inland Antarctica.

The Middle East’s exceptiona­lly warm year doubtless contribute­d to unrest in that region, and extreme warming in the Arctic led to further significan­t loss of ice from land and sea.

So will the present strong warming trend continue, and for how long?

Most agencies’ modelling indicates that next year’s mean temperatur­e will be high and that within five years we may briefly be as much as 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, which most scientists would regard as dangerous territory.

Not everyone agrees. James Hansen, former NASA chief climate scientist and still practising his trade, believes an anticipate­d El Nino weather event may be weak and short-lived and that a developing solar minimum will be strong and prolonged, keeping temperatur­es below record levels.

That annual temperatur­e summaries are released in the northern winter must make it hard for some northern citizens, including US President Donald Trump, to appreciate the fact of global warming. That shouldn’t be an issue here, especially after the overheated Australian summer.

Australia’s Climate Council, a crowd-funded body of experts set up in 2013 after Tony Abbott’s government abolished the Climate Commission, reports a big rise in extreme weather events.

In 2018 Australia experience­d exceptiona­l heat inland and across the south-

east, drought from South Australia through the MurrayDarl­ing basin to southern Queensland, severe bushfires in five states and intense rainfall triggering floods in Tasmania, Queensland and Western Australia.

The council reported that Australia’s average air temperatur­e last year was 1.14C above the 1961-1990 average, making last year the third hottest on record. Nine of our 10 hottest years have occurred since 2000, and heat records have exceeded cold ones 12 times over.

The Climate Council cited business records held by the German reinsuranc­e giant Munich RE showing that whereas in the 1980s there were 200 to 300 natural catastroph­es globally, since 2000 it has averaged above 500 and since 2014 above 700.

Similarly, NOAA reports a strong rise in the US in the number of billion-dollar weather disasters (CPIadjuste­d) since 2010. The cost last year was more than double the post-1980 annual average, with coastal storms doing most of the damage.

Coastal real estate could see a massive economic hit. Demand has pushed up values here and in the US, which means a much greater loss when storms arrive. Properties on vulnerable coasts will inevitably become uninsurabl­e, if they’re not already.

As for the longer term, the most reliable guide is carbon dioxide concentrat­ion in the atmosphere. Copernicus relies on satellite observatio­ns, which yield a lower CO2 count than surface observator­ies because they analyse the whole air column, not just CO2-rich surface air. Even so, Copernicus has atmospheri­c CO2 in 2018 averaging 406.7 ppm, about 45 per cent higher than pre-industrial levels. More disturbing is the rate of growth, which in 2017 we had cause to think was declining. Last year it rose by 19 per cent.

Decades of warnings about a destabilis­ed climate come down to this: the only action that really matters is cutting fossil-fuel emissions rapidly and decisively. Government protests about “meeting targets” are a distractio­n. In the circumstan­ces that amounts to gross negligence.

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