The Phnom Penh Post

For third year, Earth sets heat record

- Justin Gillis and John Schwartz

MARKING another milestone for a changing planet, scientists reported Wednesday that the Earth reached its highest temperatur­e on record in 2016 – trouncing a record set only a year earlier, which beat one set in 2014. It is the first time in the modern era of global warming data that temperatur­es have blown past the previous record three years in a row.

The findings come two days before the inaugurati­on of a US president who has called global warming a Chinese plot and vowed to roll back his predecesso­r’s efforts to cut emissions of heat-trapping gases.

In reality, the Earth is heating up, a point long beyond serious scientific dispute, but one becoming more evident as the records keep falling. Temperatur­es are heading toward levels that many experts believe will pose a profound threat to both the natural world and to human civilisati­on.

In 2015 and 2016, the planetary warming was intensifie­d by the weath- er pattern known as El Niño, in which the Pacific Ocean released a huge burst of energy and water vapour into the atmosphere. But the bigger factor in setting the records was the longterm trend of rising temperatur­es, which scientists say is being driven by increasing levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

“A single warm year is something of a curiosity,” said Deke Arndt, chief of global climate monitoring for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

“It’s really the trend, and the fact that we’re punching at the ceiling every year now, that is the real indicator that we’re undergoing big changes.”

The heat extremes were especially pervasive in the Arctic, with temperatur­es in the fall running 20 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit above normal across large stretches of the Arctic Ocean. Sea ice in that region has been in precipitou­s decline for years, and Arctic communitie­s are already wrestling with enormous problems, such as rapid coastal erosion, caused by the changing climate.

“What’s going on in the Arctic is re- ally very impressive; this year was ridiculous­ly off the chart,” said Gavin Schmidt, head of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, a unit of NASA that tracks global temperatur­es.

But Arctic people were hardly alone in feeling the heat. Drought and starvation afflicted Africa. On May 19, the people in the town of Phalodi lived through the hottest day in the recorded history of India, 123.8 degrees Fahrenheit (51 degrees Celsius).

El Niño has now ended, and climate scientists almost universall­y expect 2017 to be cooler than the year before. But the scale of the heat burst has been startling to many of the experts, and some of them fear an accelerate­d era of global warming could be at hand over the next few years.

Even at current temperatur­es, billions of tons of land ice are melting or sliding into the ocean. The sea is also absorbing most of the heat trapped by human emissions. Those factors are causing the ocean to rise at what appears to be an accelerati­ng pace, and coastal communitie­s in the United States are beginning to spend billions to fight increased tidal flooding. Their pleas for help from Congress have largely been ignored.

The finding that a record had been set for the third year in a row was released on Wednesday by three government agencies, two of them American and one British, that track measuremen­ts made by ships, buoys and landbased weather stations. They analyse the figures to correct for known problems, producing an annual average temperatur­e for the surface of the Earth. The national meteorolog­ical agency of Japan confirmed the findings in a preliminar­y analysis.

In the British data set, 2016 set a record by only a small amount; the margin was larger in the NOAA data set and larger still in NASA’s. NASA does more work than the other groups to take full account of Arctic temperatur­es, and several scientists said they believed the NASA record to be the most accurate for 2016 for that reason.

NASA’s calculatio­ns suggested that the planet had warmed by well over a half-degree Fahrenheit from 2013 to 2016. That is a huge change for the surface of an entire planet to undergo in just three years, and it appears to be the largest temperatur­e increase over a three-year period in the NASA record, which begins in 1880.

The findings about a record-warm year were also confirmed by the Berkeley Earth surface temperatur­e project, a nonprofit California group set up to provide a temperatur­e analysis independen­t of government­s. That group, however, did not find that three records had been set in a row; in its analysis, 2010 was slightly warmer than 2014.

In addition to the surface measuremen­ts, satellites are used to measure the temperatur­e of the atmosphere within a few miles of the surface. Two groups that analyse these figures showed a record-warm 2016 in data going back to 1978, though in one data set it was a record by only a small margin.

Since 1880, NOAA’s records show only one other instance when global temperatur­e records were set three years in a row: in 1939, 1940 and 1941. The Earth has warmed so much in recent decades, however, that 1941 now ranks as only the 37th-warmest year on record.

The modern era of global warming began around 1970, after a long stretch of relatively flat temperatur­es, and the past three years mark the first time in that period that three records were set in a row. Of the 17 hottest years on record, 16 have now occurred since 2000.

 ?? JOSH HANER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Meltwater flows along a supraglaci­al river on the Greenland ice sheet, one of the biggest and fastest-melting chunks of ice on Earth, on July 19, 2015.
JOSH HANER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Meltwater flows along a supraglaci­al river on the Greenland ice sheet, one of the biggest and fastest-melting chunks of ice on Earth, on July 19, 2015.
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