Ocean
temperatures spiked in 2013
By
John Upton
3
February, 2014
Perhaps
climate skeptics should be forced to walk the plank — so they can
feel for themselves where so much of the globe’s extra heat is
ending up.
The
mainstream media repeatedly uttered
the false but reassuring-sounding phrase
“global warming pause” last year, a reference to an unexpected
decline in the rate at which land temperatures have been recently
warming, but meanwhile temperatures in the world’s oceans were
spiking.
Just
check out this graph from NOAA, which shows the rise in the amount of
energy in the top 2,300 feet (700 meters) of the world’s oceans:
Click
to enlarge.
Long-term
the oceans have been gaining heat at a rate equivalent to about 2
Hiroshima bombs per second, although this has increased over the last
16 or so years to around 4 per second. In 2013 ocean warming rapidly
escalated, rising to a rate in excess of 12 Hiroshima bombs per
second — over three times the recent trend.
Rising
ocean temperatures might not seem as significant for us humans as
rising land temperatures, but they actually affect us in lots of
ways. Warming marine environments are disturbing wildlife the world
over, driving
fish to cooler and deeper waters
— and that is affecting fishing industries.
The
heating waters can also fuel hurricanes and other wild storms. Water
temperatures around the Philippines rose
nearly 2 degrees F last
year just before Typhoon Haiyan hit, which helped whip up the monster
storm.
And
it’s worth remembering that water expands when it heats up, which
leads to rising seas. In some subtropical areas, increasing water
temperatures are believed
to be responsible
for sea-level rise of as much as a millimeter every year. Here’s
the latest NOAA graph showing how much seas are rising, on average,
due to warming oceans (this is called steric sea-level rise):
So
the next time somebody bends your ear about a supposed “global
warming pause,” just show them these two graphs.
Sources:
The
Oceans Warmed up Sharply in 2013: We're Going to Need a Bigger Graph,
Skeptical Science
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