The New Zealand Herald

In hot water

Figures show need for urgent action on warming, warns climate expert

- Jamie Morton

Last year was one of the 10 hottest in New Zealand history and it was a similar story for ocean temperatur­es as well, new figures show.

Climate scientist Professor Jim Salinger says his calculatio­ns — putting 2020 as the ninth hottest year on record for New Zealand’s combined land and ocean region — underscore­s the need for urgent action to slow the pace of warming.

According to the country’s official, Niwa-run “seven stations” temperatur­e series, which Salinger pioneered, 2020 was New Zealand’s seventh warmest in 110 years.

The nationwide average of 13.24C followed a climate change trend that’s put six of our past eight years among the hottest ever recorded, and driven a run of 47 straight months without overall belowavera­ge temperatur­es.

Salinger said a wider picture could be seen when more climate stations and ocean temperatur­es were added.

Sea surface temperatur­es across some 4 million sq km of New Zealand’s exclusive economic zone averaged 14.16C last year, which was 0.38C above normal and the 11th warmest recorded.

And an extended dataset

The Tasman Sea was warming at one of the fastest rates on Earth — up to three times the global average.

for land temperatur­es, covering 22 stations, recorded a 2020 average of 13.75C — 0.58C above normal and the eighth warmest year in that series.

When those ocean and extra land temperatur­es were put together, the result was 13.93C — or 0.39 above average and the ninth hottest year in a record stretching back 150 years.

Salinger said it was critical to consider how New Zealand’s sprawling marine estate was also warming, given its economic and environmen­tal importance to our country.

Some 20 times larger than our land mass, New Zealand’s ocean territory supported a marine economy estimated to be worth $4 billion a year.

The resources it depended on were being increasing­ly threatened by rising ocean temperatur­es.

The Tasman Sea was warming at one of the fastest rates on Earth — up to three times the global average.

“These figures really show that warming is leaping ahead, and we need to get on to it now, both in terms of mitigation and adaptation,” he said.

The stocktake comes after Salinger, with fellow scientists Professor James Renwick and Dr Howard Diamond, published findings showing the New Zealand region had warmed by 0.66C since 1871.

All of the hottest years had been logged since 1998, in step with global warming.

Salinger noted that a La Nina system had an influence on 2020’s ocean temperatur­es.

The naturally-occurring climate driver’s formation later in the year co-incided with coastal waters around some parts of New Zealand approachin­g marine heatwave conditions.

The Southern Annular Mode — a key climate indicator — was also in a positive phase for periods of 2020, bringing westerly winds farther south over the southern oceans but lighter winds and sunnier skies over New Zealand.

As at this week, our coastal waters were running warmer than normal — ranging from 0.5C to 0.9 above average — but sea temperatur­es were expected to drop with a coming southerly change.

 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Sam Alpers, 11, takes a leap of faith off the wharf at Stanley Bay on Auckland’s North Shore.
Photo / Brett Phibbs Sam Alpers, 11, takes a leap of faith off the wharf at Stanley Bay on Auckland’s North Shore.

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