"My
colleague demolished #globalwarming "hiatus"
from 1998-2013. Temperature rise is >0.1 deg. C per decade instead
of 0.04 #climate #Canada"
--- Paul Beckwith
'Missing heat' discovery prompts new estimate of global warming
An
interdisciplinary team of researchers say they have found 'missing
heat' in the climate system, casting doubt on suggestions that global
warming has slowed or stopped over the past decade
13
November, 2013
Observational
data on which climate records are based cover only 84 per cent of the
planet – with Polar regions and parts of Africa largely excluded.
Now
Dr Kevin Cowtan, a computational scientist at the University of York,
and Robert Way, a cryosphere specialist and PhD student at the
University of Ottawa, have reconstructed the 'missing' global
temperatures using a combination of observations from satellites and
surface data from weather stations and ships on the peripheries of
the unsampled regions.
The
new research published in the Quarterly Journal of the Royal
Meteorological Society shows that the Arctic is warming at about
eight times the pace of the rest of the planet. Previous studies by
the UK Met Office based on the HadCRUT4 dataset, which only covers
about five-sixths of the globe, suggest that global warming has
slowed substantially since 1997. The new research suggests, however,
that the addition of the 'missing' data indicates that the rate of
warming since 1997 has been two and a half times greater than shown
in the Met Office studies. Evidence for the rapid warming of the
Arctic includes observations from high latitude weather stations,
radiosonde and satellite observations of temperatures in the lower
atmosphere and reanalysis of historical data.
A
member of the Department of Chemistry at York, Dr Cowtan, whose
speciality is crystallography, carried out the research in his spare
time. This is his first climate paper.
To
see video GO
HERE
He
says: "There's a perception that global warming has stopped but,
in fact, our data suggests otherwise. But the reality is that 16
years is too short a period to draw a reliable conclusion. We find
only weak evidence of any change in the rate of global
warming."
Robert Way adds: "Changes in Arctic sea ice and glaciers over
the past decade clearly support the results of our study. By
producing a truly global temperature record, we aim to better
understand the drivers of recent climate change."
More
information: The
paper 'Coverage bias in HadCRUT4 temperature series and its impact on
recent temperature trends' is published online in the Quarterly
Journal of the Royal Meteorological
Society onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/qj.2297/abstract
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