The Manila Times

Record temperatur­es expected to continue to drive extreme weather

- Attracta Mooney and Steven Bernard in London and Bryan Harris in São Paulo

EXTREME weather events around the world are expected to continue owing to high concentrat­ions of greenhouse gases, scientists say, after April marked the 11th straight month at a record global average surface temperatur­e

The temperatur­e for the hottest April on record reached 15.03C, or 0.67C above the 1991-2020 average for the month and 1.58C above preindustr­ial levels, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service.

Scientists say rising temperatur­es will lead to more extreme weather patterns globally, with heatwaves, droughts and flooding all becoming more common.

Large swaths of Asia are grappling with heatwaves that have driven temperatur­es as high as 48C in east Asia, while regions around the globe from southern China to Kenya and Brazil are dealing with fatal floods.

The global average temperatur­e for the past 12 months was the highest on record at 1.61C above the pre-industrial average, Copernicus said. This temperatur­e reading is distinct from the Paris Agreement to limit global temperatur­e rises to ideally 1.5C, which is based on a longer timeframe.

The record temperatur­es come as the world also experience­s the naturally occurring El Niño phenomenon, which results in a warming of sea surface temperatur­es in the Pacific.

The El Niño phenomenon peaked at the beginning of the year with the eastern tropical Pacific now going back to “neutral conditions”.

But the global sea surface temperatur­e was still the highest on record for April at 21.04C, marking the 13th month in a row of record temperatur­es.

“Whilst temperatur­e variations associated with natural cycles like

El Niño come and go, the extra energy trapped into the ocean and the atmosphere by increasing concentrat­ions of greenhouse gases will keep pushing the global temperatur­e towards new records,” Carlo Buontempo, director of CCCS noted.

During the 2015-2016 El Niño event, the world experience­d 16 consecutiv­e months of record temperatur­es, although this past year’s temperatur­es have been even higher.

Land temperatur­es were “most above average” in April in eastern Europe, northern and northeaste­rn North America, Greenland,

eastern Asia, north-west Middle East, parts of South America and most of Africa.

It was wetter than average for most of north-western, central and north-eastern Europe, as well as central, eastern and southern North America, across Central Asia, the Gulf countries, easternmos­t Asia, eastern Australia and southern Brazil.

The United Arab Emirates, which hosted the UN COP28 climate summit last year, was hit with extreme flash flooding in April, after experienci­ng the heaviest rainfall since records began 75 years ago.

Brazil, which is preparing to host COP30 next year, is struggling with extreme flooding in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, which has killed 90 people and displaced more than 200,000.

At the end of April, the state capital Porto Alegre had rainfall of more than 258mm in just three days, correspond­ing to about two months’ average rainfall during the season.

The Guaíba river, which runs by the city, has reached a record high of 5.3 metres. The previous record was 4.76 metres in 1941.

Flooding in Kenya has killed more than 200 people and displaced about 160,000 in recent weeks, while more than 100,000 people had to be evacuated from their homes in Guangdong, China, because of a massive deluge last month.

Sir David King, chair of the Climate Crisis Advisory Group of scientists, said the trend was “incredibly concerning”. “Despite El Niño weather patterns the record-breaking trends we are witnessing are highly unexpected.”

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