Lodi News-Sentinel

Science data shows 2017 one of the hottest years

- By Amina Khan

Either way you slice it, last year was a top-three scorcher. Global temperatur­es in 2017 were the third-highest on record, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, and the second-highest, according to data from NASA.

While the results announced during a joint briefing Thursday have slight statistica­l difference­s, they clearly show that global warming continues its upward climb, scientists said.

The results were buttressed by analyses from the United Kingdom Met Office and the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, which also ranked 2017 as a top-three year for recorded global temperatur­es.

Apart from a few cold spots, “the planet is warming remarkably uniformly,” Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said at the briefing.

The average temperatur­e in 2017 across land and ocean surfaces was 1.51 degrees Fahrenheit above the average for the 20th century, just behind the record-breaking temperatur­es set in 2016.

This makes the last three years — 2015, 2016 and 2017 — the hottest years since 1880. In fact, six of the hottest years have occurred just since 2010.

While global temperatur­es differed across continents, virtually all of them felt the heat. South America experience­d its second-warmest year since continenta­l records began in 1910, according to NOAA data. Asia felt its third-warmest, Africa its fourth-warmest and Europe its fifth-warmest year on record. North America and Oceania (a region that includes Australia, Polynesia and several other island chains) felt their sixth warmest year since recordkeep­ing started.

The record-breaking temperatur­es in 2016 were fueled slightly by El Niño, a multiyear weather pattern that can result in warmer regional temperatur­es. But 2017 was warm even without that additional help, as the pattern transition­ed toward the cooler La Nina phase.

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