The Scotsman

Last decade confirmed as hottest on record

- By EMILY BEAMENT

The world has just experience­d its hottest decade on record, with 2019 among the warmest years ever seen.

Last year saw the second highest average global temperatur­es in records dating back to the 19th century, evidence from multiple data sets suggests.

Only 2016 – when temperatur­es were boosted by a significan­t El Nino weather pattern in the Pacific – has been hotter since the records began.

The data also shows the past five years were the warmest in the 170-year series and the 2010s were the hottest decade on record.

The world has just experience­d its hottest decade on record, with 2019 among the warmest years ever seen, scientists have confirmed.

Last year saw the second highest average global temperatur­es in records dating back to the 19th century, evidence from multiple data sets suggests.

Only 2016 – when temperatur­es were boosted by a significan­t El Nino weather pattern in the Pacific – has been hotter since the records began.

The data also shows the past five years were the warmest in the 170-year series and the 2010s were the hottest decade on record.

Scientists at the Met Office Hadley Centre, the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit and the UK National Centre for Atmospheri­c Science produce one of the global data sets.

It is compiled from millions of air and sea surface temperatur­e measuremen­ts taken across the globe from land on all continents and from all oceans.

The data shows that temperatur­es were 1.05C above preindustr­ial levels, making 2019 the third warmest year in the series stretching back to 1850, behind 2016 and 2015.

Scientists from US agencies Nasa and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (Noaa) also produce data sets for global temperatur­e, each dating back to 1880, and find 2019 is the second warmest on record.

Dr Colin Morice, from the Met Office Hadley Centre, said: “Each decade from the 1980s has been successive­ly warmer than all the decades that came before.”

World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on secretary-general Petteri Taalas said global temperatur­es had risen by about 1.1C since pre-industrial times, ocean heat was at record levels and, on the existing emissions path, the world was heading for 3C to 5C of warming by 2100.

The data was confirmed as business secretary Andrea Leadsom said Britain would lead the next 30 years of climate action amid opposition warnings over the government’s “stop-start” policies.

Ms Leadsom agreed the wildfires in Australia were a “wake-up call for the world” and warned the impacts of climate change are “in the here and now”.

But labour and th es np were among those raising concerns about the speed of change and the lack of comprehens­ive policies to support the rhetoric. Labour leadership candidate Lisa Nandy said the UK should not strike a post-brexit trade deal with the US if Donald Trump quits the Paris Agreement to tackle the climate crisis. The backbench MP argued Boris Johnson should use negotiatio­ns to pressure the US president to stay in the accord to limit temperatur­e rises to well below 2C this century.

“Each decade from the 1980s has been successive­ly warmer than all the decades that came before.”

DR COLIN MORICE

 ??  ?? 0 Nicola Sturgeon visits the Star Refrigerat­ion factory in Glasgow to announce her latest initiative­s to tackle climate change
0 Nicola Sturgeon visits the Star Refrigerat­ion factory in Glasgow to announce her latest initiative­s to tackle climate change

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