Iran Daily

South Pole warming three times faster than rest of world: Research

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By Kyle Clem

Climate scientists long thought Antarctica’s interior may not be very sensitive to warming, but our research, published this week, shows a dramatic change.

Over the past 30 years, the South Pole has been one of the fastest-changing places on Earth, warming more than three times more rapidly than the rest of the world, the Guardian reported.

My colleagues and I argue these warming trends are unlikely the result of natural climate variabilit­y alone. The effects of human-made climate change appear to have worked in tandem with the significan­t influence natural variabilit­y in the tropics has on Antarctica’s climate. Together they make the South Pole warming one of the strongest warming trends on Earth.

The South Pole lies within the coldest region on Earth: The Antarctic plateau. Average temperatur­es range from -60°C during winter to just -20°C during summer.

Antarctica’s climate generally has a huge range in temperatur­e over the course of a year, with strong regional contrasts. Most of West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula were warming during the late 20th century. But the South Pole — in the remote and high-altitude continenta­l interior — cooled until the 1980s.

Scientists have been tracking temperatur­e at the Amundsensc­ott South Pole Station, Earth’s southernmo­st weather observator­y, since 1957. It is one of the longest-running complete temperatur­e records on the Antarctic continent.

Our analysis of weather station data from the South Pole shows it has warmed by 1.8°C between 1989 and 2018, changing more rapidly since the start of the 2000s. Over the same period, the warming in West Antarctica suddenly stopped and the Antarctic Peninsula began cooling.

One of the reasons for the South Pole warming was stronger low-pressure systems and stormier weather east of the Antarctic Peninsula in the Weddell Sea. With clockwise flow around the low-pressure systems, this has been transporti­ng warm, moist air on to the Antarctic plateau.

Our study also shows the ocean in the western tropical Pacific started warming rapidly at the same time as the South Pole. We found nearly 20 percent of the year-to-year temperatur­e variations at the South Pole were linked to ocean temperatur­es in the tropical Pacific, and several of the warmest years at the South Pole in the past two decades happened when the western tropical Pacific ocean was also unusually warm.

To investigat­e this possible mechanism, we performed a climate model experiment and found this ocean warming produces an atmospheri­c wave pattern that extends across the South Pacific to Antarctica. This results in a stronger low-pressure system in the Weddell Sea.

We know from earlier studies that strong regional variations in temperatur­e trends are partly due to Antarctica’s shape.

The East Antarctic ice sheet, bordered by the South Atlantic and Indian oceans, extends further north than the West Antarctic ice sheet, in the South Pacific. This causes two distinctly different weather patterns with different climate impacts.

More steady, westerly winds around East Antarctica keep the local climate relatively stable, while frequent intense storms in the high-latitude South Pacific transport warm, moist air to parts of West Antarctica.

Scientists have suggested these two different weather patterns, and the mechanisms driving their variabilit­y, are the likely reason for strong regional variabilit­y in Antarctica’s temperatur­e trends.

Our analysis reveals extreme variations in South Pole temperatur­es can be explained in part by natural tropical variabilit­y.

To estimate the influence of human-induced climate change, we analyzed more than 200 climate model simulation­s with observed greenhouse gas concentrat­ions over the period between 1989 and 2018. These climate models show recent increases in greenhouse gases have possibly contribute­d around 1°C of the total 1.8°C of warming at the South Pole.

We also used the models to compare the recent warming rate to all possible 30-year South Pole temperatur­e trends that would occur naturally without human influence. The observed warming exceeds 99.9 percent of all possible trends without human influence — and this means the recent warming is extremely unlikely under natural conditions, albeit not impossible. It appears the effects from tropical variabilit­y have worked together with increasing greenhouse gases, and the end result is one of the strongest warming trends on the planet.

These climate model simulation­s reveal the remarkable nature of South Pole temperatur­e variations. The observed South Pole temperatur­e, with measuremen­ts dating back to 1957, shows 30-year temperatur­e swings ranging from more than 1°C of cooling during the 20th century to more than 1.8°C of warming in the past 30 years.

This means multi-decadal temperatur­e swings are three times stronger than the estimated warming from human-caused climate change of around 1°C.

The temperatur­e variabilit­y at the South Pole is so extreme it currently masks human-caused effects. The Antarctic interior is one of the few places left on Earth where human-caused warming cannot be precisely determined, which means it is a challenge to say whether, or for how long, the warming will continue.

But our study reveals extreme and abrupt climate shifts are part of the climate of Antarctica’s interior. These will likely continue into the future, working to either hide human-induced warming or intensify it when natural warming processes and the human greenhouse effect work in tandem.

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GOINYK/DEPOSITPHO­TOS

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