New
Research Shows Global Warming Speeding Up
Scientists
find 'missing heat' in deep ocean waters
Lauren
McCauley, staff writer
Land, atmosphere, and ice heating (red), 0-700 meter ocean heat content (OHC) increase (light blue), and 700-2,000 meter OHC increase (dark blue). (Image: From Nuccitelli et al., 2012)
28
March, 2013
The
rate of global warming is speeding up, say scientists, despite the
apparent stagnation in the rise of global surface air temperatures
that may have prevented people from recognizing "the danger of
the climate problem we face."
A
new study
published in the journal Geophysical
Research Letters
says that in the past 15 years we've undergone "the most
sustained warming trend."
The
researchers attribute this "missing heat" phenomena to the
fact that about 90% of overall global warming goes into heating the
oceans, and the oceans have been cooking.
The
myth that global warming has slowed—which is frequently cited by
climate deniers and perpetuated by "fundamentally flawed"
studies that do not account for the warming of deep ocean waters—has
had the dangerous effect of "lull[ing] many people into a false
and unwarranted sense of security," writes
Skeptical
Science, "with
many people wrongly believing global warming has paused when in
reality it has accelerated."
The
article, "Distinctive
climate signals in reanalysis of global ocean heat content,"
explains how the strength of recent La Niña events has caused a
large amount of heat from global warming to be transferred to the
deep oceans. According to the study, "In the last decade, about
30% of the warming has occurred below 700 m, contributing
significantly to an acceleration of the warming trend."
Meanwhile,
the warming at the surface has slowed down in recent years due to
subsequent "sharp cooling" events, such as volcanic
eruptions and El Niño patterns.
Leading
climatologist Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather
Underground
explains
that, despite this apparent slowdown, the "total amount of heat
going in the atmosphere/oceans/surface has continued unabated."
As
report co-author Kevin Trenberth explained to Skeptical
Science, "It
means less short term warming at the surface but at the expense of a
greater earlier long-term warming, and faster sea level rise,"
because the extra heat energy causes ocean water to expand.
"The
global warming end result will be the same," writes Skeptical
Science, "but
the pattern of surface warming over time may be different than we
expect." They conclude:
Most
importantly, everybody (climate scientists and contrarians included)
must learn to stop equating surface and shallow ocean warming with
global warming. [...] We need to measure global warming by accounting
for all changes in global heat content, including the deeper oceans.
Otherwise we can easily fool ourselves into underestimating the
danger of the climate problem we face.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.