Oman Daily Observer

Global temp to rise next year

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LONDON: The global average temperatur­e will rise again next year but is unlikely to set a new record due to the cooling effect from the La Nina weather phenomenon in the Pacific, Britain’s Met Office said on Thursday.

The global average temperatur­e rise for 2018 is forecast to be between 0.88 and 1.12 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial average period 1850-1900.

This correspond­s to an increase of between 0.28 and 0.52 degrees C above a 1981-2010 long-term average of 14.3 degrees C.

“2018 will be very warm globally but is unlikely to exceed the recent record, set in 2016,” Adam Scaife, head of long-range prediction at Britain’s Met Office, said in a statement.

Last month, the UN’s World Meteorolog­ical Office ( WMO) said this year will be among the three hottest on record, slightly less warm than a record 2016 and roughly on a level with 2015.

“For 2018, the global temperatur­e will remain high, but the current La Niña conditions suggest that average temperatur­es will be around 0.1 degree lower than we would otherwise expect in 2018,” Met Office research fellow Doug Smith said.

La Nina is a weather phenomenon characteri­sed by unusually cold ocean temperatur­es in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, linked to floods and droughts.

Last week, a US government weather forecaster said La Nina conditions were likely to continue through the Northern Hemisphere during the winter of 2017-18.

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