Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

’20 said to tie ’16 as hottest on record

- HENRY FOUNTAIN

Last year effectivel­y tied 2016 as the hottest year on record, European climate researcher­s announced Friday, as global temperatur­es continued their relentless rise brought on by the emission of heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

The record warmth — which fueled deadly heat waves, droughts, intense wildfires and other environmen­tal disasters around the world in 2020 — occurred despite the developmen­t in the second half of the year of La Nina, a global climate phenomenon marked by surface cooling across much of the equatorial Pacific Ocean.

And while 2020 may tie the record, all of the past six years are among the hottest ever, said Freja Vamborg, a senior scientist with the Copernicus Climate Change Service.

“It’s a reminder that temperatur­es are changing and will continue to change if we don’t cut greenhouse gas emissions,” Vamborg said.

According to Copernicus, a program of the European Union, the global average temperatur­e in 2020 was about 2.25 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than the average from 1850 to 1900, before the rise of emissions from spreading industrial­ization. The 2020 average was very slightly lower than the average in 2016, too small a difference to be significan­t.

Some regions experience­d exceptiona­l warming. For the second year in a row, Europe had its warmest year ever, and suffered from deadly heat waves. But the temperatur­e difference between 2020 and 2019 was striking: 2020 was nearly three-quarters of a degree Fahrenheit warmer.

While not quite as drastic as in Europe, temperatur­es across North America were above average as well. The warming played a critical role in widespread drought that affected most of the western half of the United States and intense wildfires that ravaged California and Colorado.

The Arctic is warming much faster than elsewhere, a characteri­stic that was reflected in the 2020 numbers. In the Arctic, and especially in parts of Siberia, abnormally warm conditions persisted through most of the year. The heat led to drying of vegetation that in Siberia helped fuel one of the most intense wildfire seasons in history.

Parts of the Southern Hemisphere experience­d lower than average temperatur­es, possibly as a result of the arrival of La Nina conditions in the second half of 2020.

Vamborg said that it is difficult to attribute any temperatur­e difference­s directly to La Nina, but the cooling effect of the phenomenon may be why December 2020, when La Nina was strengthen­ing, was only the sixth warmest December ever, while most of the other months of the year were in the top three.

Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist at Berkeley Earth, an independen­t research group in California, said the greatest effect of La Nina on global temperatur­es tends to come several months after conditions peak in the Pacific. “So while certainly La Nina had some cooling effect in the last few months, it’s likely going to have a bigger impact on 2021 temperatur­es,” he said.

Hausfather said it was striking that 2020 matched 2016, because that year’s record warmth was fueled by El Nino. El Nino is essentiall­y the opposite of La Nina, when surface warming in the Pacific tends to supercharg­e global temperatur­es.

So 2020 and 2016 being equally warm, Hausfather said, means that the past five years of global warming have had a cumulative effect that is about the same as El Nino.

Berkeley Earth will release its own analysis of 2020 global temperatur­es later this month, as will the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and NASA. The three analyses take a similar approach, essentiall­y compiling thousands of temperatur­e measuremen­ts worldwide.

Copernicus employs a technique called re-analysis, which uses fewer temperatur­e measuremen­ts but adds other weather data like air pressure, and feeds it all into a computer model to come up with its temperatur­e averages.

Despite the difference­s, the results of the analyses tend to be very similar.

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