Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Earth flirts with warming threshold

UN says temporary spike in temperatur­e could happen in next 5 years

- Seth Borenstein

There’s a two-out-of-three chance that the world will temporaril­y hit a key warming limit within the next five years, the United Nations weather agency said Wednesday.

But it likely would only be a fleeting and less worrisome flirtation with the internatio­nally agreed upon temperatur­e threshold. Scientists expect a temporary burst of heat from El Nino – a naturally-occurring weather phenomenon – to supercharg­e human-caused warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas to new heights. Temperatur­es are expected to then slip back down a bit.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on forecasts a 66% likelihood that between now and 2027, the globe will have a year that averages 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the mid 19th century.

That number is critical because the 2015 Paris climate agreement set 1.5 degrees Celsius as a global guardrail in atmospheri­c warming, with countries pledging to try to prevent that much long-term warming if possible.

Scientists in a special 2018 United Nations report said going past that point would be drasticall­y and dangerousl­y different with more death, destructio­n and damage to ecosystems.

“It won’t be this year probably. Maybe it’ll be next year or the year after” that a year averages 1.5 degrees Celsius, said report lead author Leon Hermanson, a climate scientist at the United Kingdom’s Met Office.

But climate scientists said what’s likely to happen in the next five years isn’t the same as failing the global goal.

“This report does not mean that we will permanentl­y exceed the 1.5 C level specified in the Paris Agreement which refers to long-term warming over many years. However, WMO is sounding the alarm that we will breach the 1.5 C level on a temporary basis with increasing frequency,” WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said in a statement.

“We haven’t been able to limit the warming so far and we are still moving in the wrong, wrong direction,” Taalas said at a Wednesday press conference.

Hermanson cautioned that “a single year doesn’t really mean anything.” Scientists usually use 30-year averages.

Those 66% odds of a single year hitting that threshold in five years have increased from 48% last year, 40% the year before, 20% in 2020 and 10% about a decade ago. The WMO report is based on calculatio­ns by 11 different climate science centers across the globe.

The world has been inching closer to the 1.5-degree threshold due to humancause­d climate change for years. The temporary warming of this year’s expected El Nino – which starts with a warming of parts of the central Pacific Ocean and then sloshes across the globe – makes it “possible for us to see a single year exceeding 1.5 C a full decade before the long-term average,” said climate scientist Zeke Hausfather of the tech company Stripe and Berkeley Earth, who wasn’t part of the WMO report.

“We don’t expect the longer-term average to pass 1.5 C until the early-to-mid 2030s,” Hausfather said in an email. But each year at or near 1.5 matters. “We see this report as more of a barometer of how we’re getting close, because the closer you get to the threshold, the more noise bumping up and down is going to bump you over the threshold randomly,” Hermanson said in an interview. And he said the more random bumps over the mark occur, the closer the world actually gets to the threshold.

Key in all this is the El Nino cycle. The world is coming off a record-tying triple dip La Nina – three straight years of El Nino’s cooler cousin restrainin­g the human-caused warming climb – and is on the verge of an El Nino that some scientists predict will be strong.

The La Nina somewhat flattened the trend of human-caused warming so that the world hasn’t broken the annual temperatur­e mark since 2016, during the last El Nino, a super-sized one, Hermanson said.

And that means a 98% chance of breaking the 2016 annual global temperatur­e record between now and 2027, the report said. There’s also a 98% chance that the next five years will be the hottest five years on record, the report said.

Because of the shift from La Nina to El Nino “where there were floods before, there will be droughts and where there were droughts before there might be floods,” Hermanson said.

The report warned that the Amazon will be abnormally dry for a good part of the next five years while the Sahel part of Africa – the transition zone between the Sahara on the north and the savannas to the south – will be wetter.

That’s “one of the positive things coming out of this forecast,” Hermanson said.

University of Pennsylvan­ia climate scientist Michael Mann said reports like this put too much emphasis on global surface temperatur­e, which varies with the El Nino cycle, even though it is climbing upward in the long term.

The real concern is the deep water of oceans, which absorb an overwhelmi­ng majority of the world’s human-caused warming, leading to a steady rise in ocean heat content and new records set regularly.

“I think it’s important to realize that if we pass 1.5 degrees it’s not a reason to give up,” Hermanson said at a Wednesday news conference. “We have to continue working out how much we can reduce emissions of greenhouse gases as much as possible, even after that, because it will make a difference.”

“We haven’t been able to limit the warming so far and we are still moving in the wrong, wrong direction.” Petteri Taalas WMO secretary-general

 ?? PETER DEJONG/AP FILE ?? Extinction Rebellion activists block a busy road in The Hague, Netherland­s, on Jan. 28. There’s a two-out-of-three chance within the next five years that the world will temporaril­y reach the internatio­nally accepted global temperatur­e threshold for limiting the worst effects of climate change, a new World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on report forecasts.
PETER DEJONG/AP FILE Extinction Rebellion activists block a busy road in The Hague, Netherland­s, on Jan. 28. There’s a two-out-of-three chance within the next five years that the world will temporaril­y reach the internatio­nally accepted global temperatur­e threshold for limiting the worst effects of climate change, a new World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on report forecasts.

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