The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ocean show early, surprising record warming

- By Scott Dance

Earth’s ocean temperatur­es have risen so fast in recent weeks that one indicator shows surface waters have already reached their highest temperatur­es on record — a worrisome sign ahead of a predicted El Niño climate pattern that could further accelerate planetary warming.

Around mid-march, ocean-temperatur­e monitoring data shows that average surface water temperatur­es surpassed about 70 degrees Fahrenheit around the globe, excluding polar waters, for the first time since at least 1981, when the data set originated. That is warmer than what scientists observed at this time of year in 2016, when a strong El Niño drove the planet to record warmth.

The conditions are surprising and alarming to some meteorolog­ists and climate scientists, although they say it is far too early to assume that a record year of oceanic or planetary warmth is ahead.

The data suggests, at least, that the planet, already beset with extreme warmth, is entering an expected stretch of accelerati­ng heat.

The ocean temperatur­e observatio­ns coincide with the release last Monday of a definitive report from the United Nations Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change asserting that drastic action is needed to slow global warming that has already irrevocabl­y harmed ecosystems and communi- ties. Earth’s temperatur­es are on a clear upward trajec- tory, already rising by at least 2 degrees Fahrenheit since humans began burning fossil fuels to power industry.

The ocean data comes from a network of buoys, ships and satellites from which the National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administra­tion collects daily data on the first

few meters of ocean depth. The database — known as the NOAA 1/4° Daily Optimum Interpolat­ion Sea Surface Temperatur­e — shows a steady warming trend in sea surface water since the 1980s, with each of the past several years of data ranking well above all older data.

And it shows that 2023 is on pace at least to be yet another year among the warmest on record for the oceans. (Sea surface temperatur­es can vary according to weather, but across all depths, Earth’s oceans are gradually warming each year as they absorb more and more of the planet’s heat.)

“Global sea surface temperatur­es just reached uncharted territory in mod- ern records and likely much longer,” Mika Rantanen, a researcher at the Finnish Meteorolog­ical Institute, wrote on Twitter.

Sea surface temperatur­es are predicted to rise further, at least in the Pacific Ocean, as forecast models suggest El Niño is more likely than not by late summer or early fall. El Niño is associated with higher-than-average sea surface temperatur­es in the equatorial Pacific.

El Niño can accelerate the steady rise in global temperatur­es because those warm Pacific waters translate to increased evaporatio­n, which leads to increased cloud cover, which blocks sunlight from reaching Earth’s surface and encour- ages the trapping of heat in the atmosphere. It is known for discouragi­ng Atlantic hurricane developmen­t but triggering extreme droughts and floods elsewhere.

The recent trend of rising ocean temperatur­e is “prob- ably the beginning of ” a tran- sition to El Niño from the relative cooling influence of La Niña, said Gavin Schmidt, a climatolog­ist and the director of the NASA Goddard Insti- tute for Space Studies. La Niña, which is marked by cooler-than-normal equatorial­pacificsur­facewaters, had persisted for the past three years but ended last month.

But Boyin Huang, a NOAA oceanograp­her who focuses on sea surface temperatur­e analysis, said that even if El Niño brings warmer Pacific waters, other oceans can counterbal­ance that trend. That means it’s too early to draw any conclusion­s about record sea surface warmth.

“There are other factors in other regions,” Huang said.

It also remains to be seen what other data sets show about conditions so far this year, including ones that also factor in the rapidly warming polar regions. Other obser- vations are reported only monthly.

“I wouldn’t necessaril­y expect that this means 2023 will be a record-breaking year,” Schmidt said, although he added that it will “obviously be in the top 10” for sea surface warmth.

If “a fully fledged El Niño” arrives this year, however, climate scientists expect that a record-setting 2024 could follow.

As sea surface temperatur­es have ticked up in recent months, so has the temperatur­e averaged over the Earth’s entire surface. The planet’s average temperatur­e has increased from around 0.2 degrees Celsius above the 1991-2020 average in January to around 0.6 degrees above that level in mid-march. Conditions have been especially warm in Asia, eastern North America and Greenland.

Climate scientists expect that 2023 will be among the planet’s warmest years on record and think there is a 65% chance it ranks in the top five. Last year was Earth’s sixth-warmest year on record.

 ?? BRIAN INGANGA/AP 2022 ?? Global warming has already harmed ecosystems, including this bleached coral at Kisite Mpunguti Marine Park in Kenya. As sea surface temperatur­es have ticked up in recent months, so has the temperatur­e averaged over the Earth’s entire surface.
BRIAN INGANGA/AP 2022 Global warming has already harmed ecosystems, including this bleached coral at Kisite Mpunguti Marine Park in Kenya. As sea surface temperatur­es have ticked up in recent months, so has the temperatur­e averaged over the Earth’s entire surface.

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