The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Brace for extra-warm weather through 2022 — Study

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PARIS: Manmade global warming and a natural surge in Earth’s surface temperatur­e will join forces to make the next five years exceptiona­lly hot, according to a study published Tuesday.

The double whammy of climate change and so-called natural variabilit­y more than doubles the likelihood of ‘extreme warm events’ in ocean surface waters, creating a dangerous breeding ground for hurricanes and typhoons, they reported in Nature Communicat­ions.

“This warm phase is reinforcin­g long-term climate change,” lead author Florian Sevellec, a climate scientist at the University of Brest in France, told AFP.

“This particular phase is expected to continue for at least five years.”

Earth’s average surface temperatur­e has always fluctuated.

Over the last million years, it vacillated roughly every 100,000 years between ice ages and balmy periods warmer than today.

Over the last 11,000 years, those variations have become extremely modest, allowing our species to flourish.

Manmade climate change — caused by billions of tonnes of greenhouse gases injected into

This warm phase is reinforcin­g long-term climate change. Florian Sevellec, lead author

the atmosphere, mainly over the last century — has come on top of those small shifts, and today threatens to overwhelm them.

Teasing apart the influence of carbon pollution and natural variation has long bedevilled scientists trying hey to quantify the impact of climate change on cyclones, droughts, floods and other forms of extreme weather.

Sevellec and his colleagues tackled the problem in a different way.

First, they focused on the natural fluctuatio­ns that — for most climate scientists — are ‘noise’ obscuring the climate change fingerprin­t.

Second, they used a streamline­d statistica­l approach rather than the comprehens­ive climate models that generate most longterm forecasts.

‘We developed a system for predicting interannua­l’ — or short-term — ‘natural variations in climate,’ Sevellec said.

“For the period 2018-2022, we found an anomaly equivalent to the impact of anthropoge­nic warming.”

Natural warming, in other words, will have about the same impact as manmade climate change over the next five years.

The likelihood of a marine heatwave or other ocean ‘warming events’ is predicted to increase by 150 percent.

The new method — dubbed PROCAST, for PRObabilis­tic foreCAST — was tested against past temperatur­e records and proved at least as accurate as standard models.

It can be run in seconds on a laptop, rather than requiring weeks of computing time on a super-computer.

“This opens of the possibilit­y of doing climate forecasts to more researcher­s, especially in countries that don’t have easy access to super-computers,” Sevellec said.

The researcher­s intend to adapt their system to make regional prediction­s, and — in addition to temperatur­e — to estimate rainfall and drought trends.

The Paris climate treaty calls for capping global warming at ‘well below’ two degrees Celsius, and 1.5 C if deemed feasible.

On current trends, however, Earth is on track to heat up by twice that much before the end of the century.— AFP

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