The Signal

Sweltering forecast: A four-year global warm spell is expected

- Doyle Rice

This summer’s heat has shattered records around the Northern Hemisphere, from Algeria to Canada and Japan to California. New research suggests this could be only the beginning of a four-year global “warm spell.”

Using a new forecastin­g technique, scientists in a study published Tuesday predict that the rest of 2018 through 2022 may be warmer than expected around the world as humancause­d global warming and natural factors combine to heat the planet.

“The coming warm period is associated with an increased likelihood of intense to extreme temperatur­es,” the study says.

Scientists say that although the Earth will be warmer than average overall, it may not be hot everywhere for everyone:

“We are not predicting another heat wave – a warmer year doesn’t always mean (that),” study lead author Florian Sevellec told Deutsche Welle. “That’s because the forecast only covers global mean temperatur­es, not regional temperatur­es in certain parts of the world.”

The past four years have been the Earth’s four warmest on record (2016, 2017, 2015 and 2014, respective­ly).

Man-caused climate change, aka global warming, is caused by greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas.

Though the overall trend is for rising temperatur­es, warming does not occur in a straight line and can wobble from year to year. “Global warming is not a smooth, monotonous process,” the study says.

Scientists say the warming trend appeared to lapse in the early 21st century, a phenomenon known as a global warming “hiatus.”

The researcher­s built their forecastin­g system by statistica­l “hind-casting,” according to The Guardian. This crunches the data from previous climate models to measure which combinatio­n was most effective in predicting past temperatur­e trends.

The study’s predicted warmth is not a sure thing: The research says there’s a 58 percent chance that the world’s temperatur­e over the next four years will be unusually warm. There’s a 69 percent chance the oceans will be warmer than normal.

Beyond 2022, forecasts are blurry, according to Deutsche Welle. The model simply does not function well when looking further into the future, said Sevellec, a scientist at France’s National Center for Scientific Research.

The study was published in the peerreview­ed British journal Nature Communicat­ions.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? Beach umbrellas may be needed even more in the near future.
JAE C. HONG/AP Beach umbrellas may be needed even more in the near future.

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