The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Antarctica registers record temperatur­e of over 20 degrees Celsius

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Scientists in Antarctica have recorded a new record temperatur­e of 20.75 degrees Celsius, breaking the barrier of 20 degrees for the first time on the continent, a researcher said.

“We’d never seen a temperatur­e this high in Antarctica,” Brazilian scientist Carlos Schaefer told AFP.

He cautioned that the reading, taken at a monitoring station on an island off the continent’s northern tip on Feb 9, “has no meaning in terms of a climate-change trend,” because it is a one-off temperatur­e and not part of a long-term data set.

But news that the icy continent is now recording temperatur­es in the relatively balmy 20s is likely to further fuel fears about the warming of the planet.

The reading was taken at Seymour Island, part of a chain off the peninsula that curves out from the northern tip of Antarctica.

The island is home to Argentina’s Marambio research base.

Schaefer, a soil scientist, said the reading was taken as part of a 20-year-old research project on the impact of climate change on the region’s permafrost.

The previous high was in the 19s, he said.

“We can’t use this to anticipate climatic changes in the future. It’s a data point,” he said.

“It’s simply a signal that something different is happening in that area.”

Still, he added, a temperatur­e that high had never been registered in Antarctica.

Accelerati­ng melt-off from glaciers and especially ice sheets in Antarctica is helping drive sea level rises, threatenin­g coastal megacities and small island nations.

The news came a week after Argentina’s National Meteorolog­ical Service recorded the hottest day on record for Argentine Antarctica: 18.3 degrees Celsius at midday at the Esperanza base, located near the tip of the Antarctic peninsula.

The previous record stood at 17.5 degrees on March 24, 2015, it said.

It has been recording Antarctic temperatur­es since 1961.

The past decade has been the hottest on record, the United Nations said last month, with 2019 the second-hottest year ever, after 2016.

And 2020 looks set to continue the trend: last month was the hottest January on record. — AFP

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