The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Earth simmers its way to 6th-hottest year on record

- By Seth Borenstein

Earth simmered to the sixth-hottest year on record in 2021, according to several newly released temperatur­e measuremen­ts.

And scientists say the exceptiona­lly hot year is part of a long-term warming trend that shows hints of accelerati­ng.

U.S. science agencies NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, and a private measuring group, released their calculatio­ns for last year’s global temperatur­e on Thursday, and all said it wasn’t far behind ultra-hot 2016 and 2020.

Six different calculatio­ns found 2021 was between the fifth and seventh hottest year since the late 1800s. NASA said 2021 tied with 2018 for sixth warmest, while the NOAA puts last year in sixth place by itself.

Scientists say a La Nina, the natural cooling of parts of the central Pacific that changes weather patterns globally and brings chilly deep ocean water to the surface, dampened global temperatur­es just as its flip side, El Nino, boosted them in 2016.

Still, they said 2021 was the hottest La Nina year on record, and that the year did not represent a cooling off of human-caused climate change but provided more of the same heat.

“So it’s not quite as headline-dominating as being the warmest on record, but give it another few years and we’ll see another one of those” records, said climate scientist Zeke Hausfather of the Berkeley Earth monitoring group that also ranked 2021 the sixth hottest. “It’s the long-term trend, and it’s an indomitabl­e march upward.”

Gavin Schmidt, the climate scientist who heads NASA’s temperatur­e team, said “the long-term trend is very, very clear. And it’s because of us. And it’s not going to go away until we stop increasing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.”

The last eight years have been the eight hottest on record, NASA and NOAA data agree. Global temperatur­es, averaged over a 10year period to take out natural variabilit­y, are nearly 2 degrees warmer than 140 years ago, their data shows.

The other 2021 measuremen­ts came from the Japanese Meteorolog­ical Agency, and satellite measuremen­ts by Copernicus Climate Change Service in Europe and the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

There was such a distinctiv­e jump in temperatur­es about eight to 10 years ago that scientists have started looking at whether the rise in temperatur­es is speeding up. Schmidt and Hausfather said early signs point to that, but it is hard to know for sure.

“If you just look at the last the last 10 years, how many of them are way above the trend line from the previous 10 years? Almost all of them,” Schmidt said in an interview.

There is a 99% chance that 2022 will be among the 10 warmest years on record, and a 10% chance it will be the hottest on record, said NOAA climate analysis chief Russell Vose in a Thursday press conference.

Vose said chances are 5050 that at least one year in the 2020s will hit 2.7 degrees warming since preindustr­ial times, the level of warming nations agreed to try to avoid in the 2015 Paris climate accord.

While that threshold is important, extreme weather from climate change is hurting people now in their daily lives with about 2.2 degrees warming, Vose and Schmidt said.

The global average temperatur­e last year was 58.5 degrees, according to NOAA. In 1988, NASA’s then-chief climate scientist James Hansen grabbed headlines when he testified to Congress about global warming in a year that was the hottest on record at the time. Now, the 57.7 degrees of 1988 ranks as the 28thhottes­t year on record.

Last year, 1.8 billion people in 25 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations had their hottest years on record, including China, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Iran, Myanmar and South Korea, according to Berkeley Earth.

The deep ocean, where most heat is stored in the seas, also set a record for warmth in 2021, according to a separate new study.

“Ocean warming, aside from causing coral bleaching and threatenin­g sea life and fish population­s, ... is destabiliz­ing Antarctic ice shelves and threatens massive ... sea-level rise if we don’t act,” said study co-author Michael Mann, a Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist.

The last time Earth had a cooler than normal year by NOAA or NASA calculatio­ns was 1976. That means 69% of the people on the planet, more than 5 billion people under age 45, have never experience­d such a year, based on United Nations data.

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