The Asian Age

‘ Oceans heating faster than thought’

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have absorbed 90 percent of the temperatur­e rise caused by man- made carbon emissions.

But new research published in the journal Nature used a novel method of measuring ocean temperatur­e.

It found that for each of the last 25 years, oceans may have absorbed heat energy equivalent to as much as 150 times the amount of electricit­y mankind produces annually.

That is between 10- 70 per cent higher than previous studies showed.

Whereas those studies relied on tallying the excess heat produced by known man- made greenhouse gas emissions, a team of US- based scientists focused on two gases found naturally in the atmosphere: oxygen and carbon dioxide.

Both gases are soluble in water, but the rate at which water absorbs them decreases as it warms.

By measuring atmospheri­c oxygen and CO2 for each year, scientists were able to estimate how much heat oceans had absorbed on a global scale.

The authors initially calculated that oceans had warmed 60 per cent more than previously thought.

However, after some controvers­y, they acknowledg­ed mistakes in the margin- of- error calculatio­ns, and subsequent­ly settled on a range of 10- 70 per cent.

“Our error margins are too big now to really weigh in on the precise amount of warming that’s going on in the ocean,” said author Ralph Keeling.

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