The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2019 one of the world’s hottest years on record

More than 520 scientists globally contribute to report.

- By Nedra Rhone nedra.rhone@ajc.com

Last year was one of the hottest years on record, according to a new government report confirming the Earth’s continued warming trend. Greenhouse gases were also at the highest level on record, reaching levels unseen for more than a half-century.

The annual State of the Climate report, led by scientists at the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s National Centers for Environmen­tal Informatio­n, reviews the world’s climate with contributi­ons from more than 520 scientists in 60 countries.

“What came through this year was a real continuati­on of some of the patterns we have seen in recent decades where it is not just temperatur­e. There are dozens of other diagnostic­s, and almost unanimousl­y they are showing that we are in a warming world,” said Deke Arndt, climatolog­ist for NOAA.

Though the report measures global trends, the local impact included above-average temperatur­es recorded over most of the Southeast during autumn. Those high temperatur­es along with several extremes helped make 2019 the hottest year on record in metro Atlanta since the first full year of data was collected in 1879.

“Under the background of climate change, the Southeast is undergoing and will undergo more extremes,” said state climatolog­ist Bill Murphey. “You will get more alternatin­g colder and hotter days and more wetter or drier conditions.” One example was the flash droughts last fall that left lakes and rivers across the state at below-average water levels and left some Georgia farmers with drought-related crop losses.

Last year, the average annual temperatur­e globally was 0.79 to 1 degree Fahrenheit above the 1981-2010 average. Though 2016 remains the hottest year, the six warmest years on record have all occurred in the past six years beginning in 2014, said the report.

In addition, greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, hit peak levels in 2019, trapping climate-alteringhe­atintheatm­osphere. The increase in temperatur­es driven by greenhouse gases is almost entirely humancause­d, Arndt said.

Fossil fuel consumptio­n or production and deforestat­ion are the largest human-caused factors resulting in increased greenhouse gases, followed to a lesser extent by some agricultur­al processes and the carbon-intensive production of concrete, Arndt said.

Only a record El Nino in 2016 outpaced the average sea surface temperatur­e of 2019.

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