2012
another record-setter, fits climate forecasts
In
2012, many past warnings scientists have made about global warming
went from studies in journals to real-life examples. One example:
July was the hottest month in record-keeping U.S. history.
MSN,
21
December, 2012
WASHINGTON
— As 2012 began, winter in the U.S. went AWOL. Spring and summer
arrived early with wildfires, blistering heat and drought. And fall
hit the eastern third of the country with the ferocity of Superstorm
Sandy.
This
past year's weather was deadly, costly and record-breaking everywhere
— but especially in the United States.
If
that sounds familiar, it should. The previous year also was one for
the record books.
"We've
had two years now of some angry events," said Deke Arndt, U.S.
National Climatic Data Center monitoring chief. "I'm hoping that
2013 is really boring."
In
2012 many of the warnings scientists have made about global warming
went from dry studies in scientific journals to real-life video
played before our eyes: Record melting of the ice in the Arctic
Ocean. U.S. cities baking at 95 degrees or hotter. Widespread
drought. Flooding. Storm surge inundating swaths of New York City.
All
of that was predicted years ago by climate scientists and all of that
happened in 2012.
"What
was predicted was there would be more of these things," said
Michel Jarraud, secretary general for the World Meteorological
Organization.
Globally,
five countries this year set heat records, but none set cold records.
2012 is on track to be the warmest year on record in the United
States. Worldwide, the average through November suggests it will be
the eighth warmest since global record-keeping began in 1880.
July
was the hottest month in record-keeping U.S. history, averaging 77.6
degrees. Over the year, more than 69,000 local heat records were set
— including 356 locations in 34 states that hit their highest-ever
temperature mark.
America's
heartland lurched from one extreme to the other without stopping at
"normal." Historic flooding in 2011 gave way to devastating
drought in 2012.
"The
normal has changed, I guess," said U.S. National Weather Service
acting director Laura Furgione. "The normal is extreme."
While
much of the U.S. struggled with drought that conjured memories of the
Dust Bowl, parts of Africa, Russia, Pakistan, Colombia, Australia and
China dealt with the other extreme: deadly and expensive flooding.
But
the most troubling climate development this year was the melting at
the top of the world, Jarraud said. Summer sea ice in the Arctic
shrank to 18 percent below the previous record low. The normally
ice-packed Arctic passages were open to shipping much of the summer,
more than ever before, and a giant Russian tanker carrying liquefied
natural gas made a delivery that way to prove how valuable this route
has become, said Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice
Data Center.
Also
in Greenland, 97 percent of the surface ice sheet had some melting.
Changes in the Arctic alter the rest of the world's weather and
"melting of the ice means an amplifying of the warming,"
Jarraud said.
There
were other weather extremes no one predicted: A European winter cold
snap that killed more than 800 people. A bizarre summer windstorm
called a derecho in the U.S. mid-Atlantic that left millions without
power. Antarctic sea ice that inched to a record high. More than a
foot of post-Thanksgiving rain in the western U.S. Super Typhoon
Bopha, which killed hundreds of people in the Philippines and was the
southernmost storm of its kind.
The
United States has had "some quiet years while the rest of the
world was quite wild," but that's not the case this year, Arndt
said. Insurance giant Munich Re in a report this fall concluded:
"Nowhere in the world is the rising number of annual natural
catastrophes more evident than in North America."
In
2011, the United States set a record with 14 billion-dollar weather
disasters. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has a
preliminary count of 11 such disasters this year. And NOAA's official
climate extreme index, which tallies disasters and rare events like
super-hot days, is on pace to set its own record.
Arndt
points to the geographic heart of America, the Mississippi River, as
emblematic.
On
May 6, 2011, the Mississippi River at New Madrid, Mo., crested at its
highest point on record. Less than 16 months later on Aug. 30, 2012,
the same spot on the river was more than 53 feet lower, hitting an
all-time low water mark.
The
U.S. went through the same lurching extremes on tornadoes. Those
storms killed 553 people last year, Furgione said. This year began
with many tornadoes, then in April they just stopped. April to
November, normal tornado season, saw the fewest F1 or stronger
tornadoes in the U.S. ever.
"Every
year is bringing different types of extreme weather and climate
events," NOAA chief Jane Lubchenco said. "All storms today
are happening in a climate-altered world."
Not
everything is connected to man-made global warming, climate
scientists say. Some, like tornadoes, have no scientifically
discernible connection. Others, like the East Coast superstorm, will
be studied to see if climate change is a cause, although scientists
say rising sea levels clearly worsened flooding. They are more
convinced that the heat waves of last summer are connected to global
warming.
These
are "clearly not freak events," but "systemic
changes," said climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam
Institute in Germany. "With all the extremes that, really, every
year in the last 10 years have struck different parts of the globe,
more and more people absolutely realize that climate change is here
and already hitting us."
In
1988, NASA scientist James Hansen, sometimes called the godfather of
global warming science, ran computer models that predicted the decade
of the 2010s would see many more 95-degree or hotter days and much
fewer subfreezing days. This year made Hansen's predictions seemed
like underestimates. For example, he predicted that in the 2010s
Memphis would have on average 26 days of more than 95 degrees. This
year there were 47.
Scientists
— both those studying global warming and those studying hurricanes
— have warned for more than a decade about a hurricane with big
storm surge hitting New York City and flooding the subways. That
happened with Sandy. Though it was never a major hurricane, it
stretched across nearly 1,000 miles in the U.S., bringing storm
surges, power outages to millions and even snow. Sandy killed more
than 125 people in the United States and at least 70 in the
Caribbean.
For
decades, scientists have predicted extensive droughts from global
warming. This year, the drought of 2012 was so extensive that nearly
2,300 counties — in almost every state — were declared
agriculture disasters. At one point this summer more than 65 percent
of the Lower 48 was suffering from drought.
And
with lack of water, came fire, something also mentioned as more
likely in scientific reports about global warming. Fire season in the
United States came earlier than normal and lasted longer, officials
said. Nearly 9.2 million acres — an area bigger than the state of
Maryland — have been burned by wildfire, the third most since
accurate recordkeeping began in 1960.
"Take
any one of these events in isolation, it might be possible to yell
'fluke!' Take them collectively, it provides confirmation of
precisely what climate scientists predicted would happen decades ago
if we proceeded with business-as-usual fossil fuel burning, as we
have," Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael
Mann said in an email. "And this year especially is a cautionary
tale. What we view today as unprecedented extreme weather will become
the new normal in a matter of decades if we proceed with
business-as-usual."
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