Perfil (Sabado)

Report: Greenhouse gases hit new highs in 2017

New study cites how temperatur­es reached 43.4 Celsius, or 110.1 degrees Fahrenheit, in Puerto Madryn back in January, branding it ‘the highest temperatur­e ever recorded so far south anywhere in the world.’

- BY KERRY SHERIDAN @KERRSHERID­AN

Planet-warming greenhouse gases surged to new highs as abnormally hot temperatur­es swept the globe and ice melted at record levels in the Arctic last year due to climate change, a major US report has found. The annual State of the Climate Re

port, compiled by more than 450 scientists from over 60 countries, describes worsening climate conditions worldwide in 2017, the same year that US President Donald Trump pulled out of the landmark Paris climate deal.

The United States is the world’s second-leading polluter after China, but has rolled back environmen­tal safeguards under Trump, who has declared climate change a “Chinese hoax” and exited the Paris deal signed by more than 190 nations as a path toward curbing harmful emissions.

The 300-page report issued by the American Meteorolog­ical Society and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) mentioned the word “abnormal” a dozen times, referring to storms, droughts, scorching temperatur­es and record low ice cover in the Arctic.

Here are its key findings:

GREENHOUSE GAS SURGE

Last year, the top three most dangerous greenhouse gases released into Earth’s atmosphere -— carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide -— reached new record highs.

The annual global average carbon dioxide concentrat­ion at the Earth’s surface climbed to 405 parts per million, “the highest in the modern atmospheri­c measuremen­t record and in ice core records dating back as far as 800,000 years,” said the report. “The global growth rate of CO2 has nearly quadrupled since the early 1960s.”

HEAT RECORDS

The record for hottest year in modern times was set in 2016, but 2017 was not far behind, with “much-warmer-thanaverag­e conditions” across most of the world, it said.

Annu al recordhigh­tem pera tu reswe re observed in Argentina, Bulgaria, Spain and Uruguay, while Mexico “broke its annual record for the fourth consecutiv­e year.”

Smashing more heat records, temperatur­es reached 43.4 Celsius, or 110.1 degrees Fahrenheit, on January 27 at Puerto Madryn, Argentina, “the highest temperatur­e ever recorded so far south anywhere in the world.”

The world’s highest temperatur­e ever for May was observed on May 28 in Turbat, western Pakistan, with a high of 53.5 Celsius, or 128.3 degrees Fahrenheit.

“The 10 warmest years on record have all occurred since 1998, with the four warmest years occurring since 2014,” said the report.

Last year marked either the second or third hottest since the mid-1800s, de- pending on which data is consulted. In another alarming milestone, 2017 was al so “the warmest non-El Niño ye ar int he instrument­al record,” referring to the abs en ce oft he oc casi o na lo ceanw ar ming trend that pushes temperatur­es higher than normal.

ABNORMAL ARCTIC

Unpreceden­ted heat enveloped the Arctic, where land surface temperatur­e was 1.6 Celsius, or 2.9 degrees Fahrenheit above the 1981–2010 average.

Arctic temperatur­es were the second highest – after 2016 –since records began in 1900. “Today’s abnormally warm Arctic air and sea surface temperatur­es have not been observed in the last 2,000 years,” it said.

And glaciers across the world shrank for the 38th year in a row. “Cumulative­ly since 1980, this loss is equivalent to slicing 22 metres off the top of the average glacier,” said the report.

In the Antarctic, sea ice extent remained below average all year, with record lows observed during the first four months.

RECORD SEA LEVEL

Global sea level reached record highs in 2017 for the sixth consecutiv­e year. The world’s average sea level is now 7.7 centimetre­s, or three inches, higher than in 1993. “I think of the oceans like a freight train,” oceanograp­her Gregory Johnson from NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmen­tal Laboratory told reporters. “If we were to freeze greenhouse gases at the level they are today, the oceans would continue to warm and seas would continue to rise for centuries to millennia.”

EXTREME RAIN

Precipitat­ion in 2017 “was clearly above the long-term average,” the report’s authors found. Warmer ocean temperatur­es has led to increasing moisture in the air, particular­ly in the last three years, causing more rain. Climate change can also exacerbate extreme weather. Some parts of the world suffered extended droughts, demonstrat­ing that “extreme precipitat­ion is not evenly distribute­d across the globe.”

CORAL BLEACHING

Ocean warming over the last few years has been blamed for widespread coral bleaching, as disease spreads in this precious habitat for fish and marine life.

“The most recent global coral bleaching lasted three full years, June 2014 to May 2017, and was the longest, most widespread and almost certainly most destructiv­e such event on record,” said the report.

The 10 warmest years on record have all occurred since 1998, with the four warmest years occurring since 2014.

 ?? JAMES GRAINGER ?? A new climate report has revealed how Puerto Madryn (pictured here in an early morning photograph) reached a high of 43.3 Celsius back in January.
JAMES GRAINGER A new climate report has revealed how Puerto Madryn (pictured here in an early morning photograph) reached a high of 43.3 Celsius back in January.

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina