Marin Independent Journal

2020 may have set another heat record

- By Seth Borenstein

Earth’s rising fever hit or neared record hot temperatur­e levels in 2020, global weather groups reported Thursday.

Earth’s rising fever hit or neared record hot temperatur­e levels in 2020, global weather groups reported Thursday.

While NASA and a couple of other measuremen­t groups said 2020 passed or essentiall­y tied 2016 as the hottest year on record, more agencies, including the National Oceanic Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said last year came in a close second or third. The difference­s in rankings mostly turned on how scientists accounted for data gaps in the Arctic, which is warming faster than the rest of the globe.

“It’s like the film ‘Groundhog Day.’ Another year, same story — record global warmth,” said Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist Michael Mann, who wasn’t part of the measuremen­t teams. “As we continue to generate carbon pollution, we expect the planet to warm up. And that’s precisely what we’re seeing.”

Scientists said all you had to do was look outside: “We saw the heat waves. We saw the fires. We saw the (melting) Arctic,” said NASA top climate scientist Gavin Schmidt. “We’re expecting it to get hotter and that’s exactly what happened.”

NOAA said 2020 averaged 58.77 degrees (14.88 degrees Celsius), a few hundredths of a degree behind 2016. NASA saw 2020 as warmer than 2016 but so close they are essentiall­y tied. The European Copernicus group also called it an essential tie for hottest year, with 2016 warmer by an insignific­ant fraction. Japan’s weather agency put 2020

as warmer than 2016, but a separate calculatio­n by Japanese scientists put 2020 as a close third behind 2016 and 2019. The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, the British weather agency and Berkeley Earth’s monitoring team had 2016 ahead.

Trends

First or second rankings really don’t matter, “but the key thing to take away is that the long-term trends in temperatur­e are very very clearly up and up and up,” said Schmidt, who heads NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies that tracks temperatur­es. “We’re in a position where we’re pushing the climate system out of the bounds that it’s been in for tens of thousands of years, if not millions of years.”

All the monitoring agencies agree the six warmest years on record have been the six years since 2015. The 10 warmest have all occurred since 2005, and

scientists say that warming’s driven by the burning of coal, oil and natural gas.

Temperatur­es the last six or seven years “really hint at an accelerati­on in the rise of global temperatur­es,” said Russ Vose, analysis branch chief at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmen­tal Informatio­n. While temperatur­e increases have clearly accelerate­d since the 1980s, it’s too early to discern a second and more recent accelerati­on, Schmidt said.

Last year’s exceptiona­l heat “is yet another stark reminder of the relentless pace of climate change, which is destroying lives and livelihood­s across our planet,” United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said in a statement. “Making peace with nature is the defining task of the 21st century.”

The United States, which had its fifth warmest yea r, smashed the record for the number of weather disasters

that cost at least $1 billion with 22 of them in 2020, including hurricanes, wildfires, tornadoes and a Midwest derecho. The old record of 16 was set in 2011 and 2017. This was the sixth consecutiv­e year with 10 or more billion-dollar climate disasters, with figures adjusted for inflation.

More numbers

Earth has now warmed 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.2 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times and is adding another 0.2 degrees Celsius (0.36 Fahrenheit) a decade.

That means the planet is nearing an internatio­nal warming threshold set in Paris in 2015, Vose and Schmidt said. Nations of the world set a goal of preventing at least 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming, with a tougher secondary goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit).

 ?? RICCARDO DE LUCA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On July 31, a fan sprays water mist as customers sit outside a cafe in downtown Rome during a heat wave with temperatur­es over 34 Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).
RICCARDO DE LUCA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On July 31, a fan sprays water mist as customers sit outside a cafe in downtown Rome during a heat wave with temperatur­es over 34 Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).

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