The Borneo Post

2019 was Europe’s hottest year ever — EU

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PARIS: Last year was the hottest in history across Europe as temperatur­e records were shattered by a series of extreme heatwaves across the continent, the European Union’s satellite monitoring surface said Wednesday.

In its annual report on the state of the climate, the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said that 11 of the continent’s 12 warmest years on record have been since 2000 as greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise.

Warm conditions and summer heatwaves contribute­d to widespread drought across southern Europe, while areas of the Arctic were close to one degree Celsius hotter than a typical year, it said.

Overall, temperatur­es across Europe have been 2 degrees Celsius hotter during the last five years than they were in the latter half of the 19th Centry, C3S’s data showed.

2019 globally was second hottest only to 2016, a year that experience­d an exceptiona­lly strong El Nino warming event.

C3S director Carlo Buontempo said that while 2019 was Europe’s hottest year on record, it was important to focus on the continent’s longterm heating.

“One exceptiona­l warm year does not constitute a warming trend, but to have detailed informatio­n from our operationa­l service, that covers many different aspects of our climate, we are able to connect the dots to learn more about how it is changing,” he said.

Some parts of Europe experience­d periods up to 4 degrees Celsius hotter than the historic baseline last year, and heatwaves – notably in June and July – saw temperatur­e records shattered in France, Germany and Britain.

The Paris climate deal commits nations to limit global temperatur­e rises to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels.

To do so, and to stand any hope of meeting the accord’s more ambitious cap of 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming, the UN says emissions from fossil fuel use must fall 7.6 per cent annually by 2030.

While carbon pollution levels are expected to drop significan­tly in 2020 due to the economic slowdown from the Covid-19 pandemic, there are fears that emissions will surge back once a vaccine is found.

“The response to the Covid19 crisis could exacerbate the climate crisis if bailouts of the fossil fuel industry and fossil-intensive sectors are not conditiona­l on a transition to clean technologi­es,” said Cameron Hepburn, director of the University of Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environmen­t.

Andrew Shepherd, director of the University of Leeds’ Centre for Polar Observatio­n and Modelling, said C3S’s data was all the more worrying as it foreshadow­ed accelerate­d melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet.

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