2013
NZ's second hottest year on record - expert
Last
year was New Zealand's second warmest on record, says climate
scientist Dr Jim Salinger.
TVNZ,
6
January, 2014
After
compiling data from 22 land stations and three islands, Dr Salinger
said that he found the annual mean temperature was nearly one degree
higher than average.
The
Auckland-based weather expert also found that mean temperatures were
well above average in the months of March, July, August and November
and record mean temperatures were noted in Masterton, Omarama,
Timaru, Invercargill and the Chatham Islands.
Further,
Dr Salinger found that temperatures during the winter months last
year were nearly 1.3 degrees above the long-term average, which made
it the warmest winter since records were first kept 150 years ago.
The
New Zealand region had only two cooler than average years - 2004 and
2009 - in the past decade, he said.
The
10-year mean temperature for 2004-2013 was 0.26 degrees above
average, the highest on record.
Dr
Salinger's findings follow the release of a report which claims 2013
was Australia's warmest year on record.
Last
week, a report released by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology said
that area-averaged mean temperature for the nation last year was 1.2
degrees Celsius above average.
While
preliminary data for the January-November period from the World
Meteorological Organisation (WMO) indicates that the estimated global
mean temperature for 2013 is 0.49 degrees Celsius above the long-term
(1961-1990) average of 14 degrees Celsius.
Dr
Salinger said 2013 ranks as the sixth-warmest year since global
records commenced in 1880.
He
said no year since 1985 has recorded a below-average global mean
temperature and nine of the ten warmest years have occurred in the
past 12 years (2002-2013).
In
New Zealand, he said the warmer weather could be put down to a
neutral El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO).
Dr
Salinger also said that the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO)
was negative, which favours more easterlies and north easterlies at
times with above average temperatures.
"At
the same time sea surface temperatures were above average by around
one degree Celcius, especially surrounding the South Island and to
the east," he said.
Further,
Dr Salinger said ENSO neutral conditions are expected to persist at
least until winter 2014, and negative IPO conditions are very likely
to persist for the remainder of 2014.
"These
conditions are presaged to bring above average temperatures of 0.2 to
0.6 degrees Celsius above average for the New Zealand region,"
he said.
Dr
Salinger claimed New Zealand regional temperatures have warmed by 0.5
degrees Celsius since 1950 and over one degree overall.
"This
is similar to what has occurred globally, and the general trend is
expected to continue," he said.
Meanwhile,
figures from the UK Met Office predict that the global average
temperature is expected to remain between 0.28 degrees Celsius and
0.59 degrees Celsius above the long-term (1971-2000) average during
the period 2013-2017.
Record
sparks hot debate on Tony Abbott's climate policy
Australia
smashed its previous annual heat record in 2013, sparking renewed
political debate about climate change.
4
January, 2013
The
Bureau of Meteorology on Friday confirmed that last year was the
hottest nationwide in more than a century of standardised records,
with mean temperatures 1.2 degrees above the 1961-90 average.
The
12 months easily eclipsed the previous annual record set in 2005,
when mean temperatures were 1.03 degrees above average.
Every
state and the Northern Territory recorded at least their fourth
warmest year by mean temperatures, underscoring the breadth of 2013's
unusual heat.
By
maximums, all but Victoria and Tasmania recorded their hottest years,
with nationwide maximums a full 1.45 degrees above the long-term
average, shattering the previous record of 1.21 degrees in 2002.
Melbourne
posted its third-hottest year, based on records going back to the
1850s, with maximums averaging 21.5 degrees, shy of 2007's record of
21.8 degrees. The city's minimums averaged 12.2 degrees, second only
to 2007's 12.5 degrees.
The
report sparked a heated political exchange, with Labor accusing Prime
Minister Tony Abbott of remaining stuck in the belief that global
warming was ''absolute crap'' - a remark he infamously made in 2009.
''The
policy he has is a con job that you have when you think that climate
change is absolute crap,'' acting Labor leader Penny Wong said.
Foreign
Minister Julie Bishop retorted that Senator Wong was being
''nonsensical'' and said the Coalition would meet Australia's 5 per
cent carbon reduction pledge through its ''direct action'' policy.
The
report also follows a fierce attack on climate change science this
week by businessman Maurice Newman, the chairman of Mr Abbott's
business advisory group. In a newspaper opinion article, Mr Newman
branded climate change a ''scientific delusion''.
Acting
Greens leader Richard Di Natale accused Mr Abbott of ''listening to
people who are part of the tinfoil hat brigade''. Dr Di Natale said
it went against all evidence for the government to unwind the carbon
tax. ''The experts right around the world are telling him loudly and
clearly that we've got a big problem on our hands and we've got to
start taking action to fix it.''
Inland
heat
Statewide,
Victoria had its third-warmest year, with mean temperatures 1.04
degrees above the 1961-90 average used as the benchmark. It was
Tasmania's sixth warmest.
“Victoria
and Tasmania had a relatively cool finish to the year – both were
below average in November – that just took the edge off things a
bit,” said Blair Trewin, senior climatologist at the Bureau of
Meteorology.
A
blistering start to 2013 was followed by a series of “warm waves”
that swept across much of the country at intervals of four to six
weeks, and have continued into 2014.
Moomba
in South Australia recording 49.3 degrees on Thursday, while
Birdsville in Queensland clocked up 48.6 degrees.
Walgett,
meanwhile, reached 49.1 degrees on Friday, the highest for NSW since
1939, the Bureau of Meteorology's Dr Trewin said. Other towns to set
records on Friday include Moree, Tamworth and Armidale in NSW, and St
George and Roma in Queensland.
The
hot air mass is slowly shifting east. Brisbane may challenge its
record high of 43.2 degrees on Saturday, with 41 degrees forecast.
"That
(forecast) would be factoring in some possibility of a sea breeze,"
said the bureau's Dr Trewin. "If the sea breeze fails, anything
could happen."
No
El Nino
For
2013, the exceptional heat has been attributed to a delayed monsoon,
record warm waters around the country and fewer-than-usual cold
fronts.
Inland
Queensland and NSW “is also the core of the area that is in
significant drought at the moment”, said the bureau’s Dr Trewin:
“Because soil moisture is lower than normal, you have less capacity
for moisture at ground level cooling the air slightly.”
Climate
experts, though, have been surprised national temperature records
were broken by such large margins not least because key weather
patterns such as the El Nino-Southern Oscillation in the Pacific
remained in a neutral phase.
“Australia
has set a new record-high temperature in a period when there’s been
no El Nino event (and) global temperatures have not increased so
rapidly,” said David Karoly, a climate scientist at the University
of Melbourne. “So this is particularly unusual.”
Australia’s
records “cannot be explained by natural variability alone,"
Professor Karoly said. "This event could not have happened
without increasing greenhouse gases, without climate change."
Unusual
weather
Unusual
weather patterns have played havoc for some farmers – and backyard
potterers - in other ways. September, for instance, posted
Australia’s most exceptional heat.
Nationally,
maximums were 3.41 degrees higher than average, including 2.74
degrees in Victoria and 5.39 degrees in SA – the most for any state
in any month.
While
mild by mid-summer standards, the warmth prompted “accelerated or
premature development of plant and crops”, the bureau noted last
year. Such growth exposed crops to late-season frosts across several
states.
Professor
Will Steffen, a climate scientist at the Australian National
University and a member of the Climate Council, said temperature
trends have been “sharply upward” since the 1960s and predicted
2013 will look a lot less remarkable in years to come.
“When
you accumulate more heat in the atmosphere, the odds are you’re
going to see more high-temperatures records broken,” Professor
Steffen said.
“If
we keep emitting (carbon dioxide) at the rates we are now, in another
three or four decades, 2013 will look like an average year - perhaps
even a cool year.”
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