WMO:
2013 Among Top Ten Warmest on Record
Geneva,
5 February 2014 –The year 2013 was among the top ten warmest
years since modern records began in 1850, according to the World
Meteorological Organization (WMO). It tied with 2007 as the sixth
warmest year, with a global land and ocean surface temperature that
was 0.50°C (0.90°F) above the 1961–1990 average and 0.03°C
(0.05°F) higher than the most recent 2001–2010 decadal average.
Thirteen of the 14
warmest years on record have all occurred in the 21st century. The
warmest years on record are 2010 and 2005, with global temperatures
about 0.55 °C above the long term average, followed by 1998, which
also had an exceptionally strong El Niño event.
Warming El Niño events
and cooling La Niña events are major drivers of the natural
variability in our climate. Neither condition was present during
2013, which was warmer than 2011 or 2012, when La Niña had a cooling
influence. 2013 was among the four warmest ENSO-neutral (neither El
Niño nor La Niña) years on record.
“The global temperature
for the year 2013 is consistent with the long term warming trend,”
said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud. “The rate of warming is
not uniform but the underlying trend is undeniable. Given the record
amounts of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, global temperatures
will continue to rise for generations to come,” said Mr Jarraud.
“Our action – or
inaction – to curb emissions of carbon dioxide and other
heat-trapping gases will shape the state of our planet for our
children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren,” said Mr Jarraud.
Surface temperature is
one of the most familiar and consistently measured weather and
climate variables, and has the most direct connection to long-term
climate change. But it is just part of a much wider picture. More
than 90 percent of the excess heat being caused by human activities
is being absorbed by the ocean.
WMO released the
temperature data in advance of its full Statement on the Status of
the Climate in 2013, which will be published in March 2014. This will
give more extensive details of regional temperatures, precipitation,
floods, droughts, tropical cyclones, ice cover and sea-level.
WMO is currently
compiling information from its 191 Members about national trends and
extreme events in 2013. In contrast with 2012, when the United
States, in particular, observed record high annual temperatures, the
warmth in 2013 was most extreme in Australia, which had its hottest
year on record.
The WMO global
temperature analysis is principally based on three independent
complementary datasets maintained by Met Office Hadley Centre and the
Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom
(combined); the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) National Climatic Data Centre; and the Goddard Institute of
Space Studies (GISS) operated by the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
Each of these datasets
use slightly different methods of calculation and so each gave 2013 a
different temperature ranking, but showed consistency on the
inter-annual changes and the longer warming trends globally. WMO
consolidates these datasets to provide single, consolidated
temperature figures. WMO also uses reanalysis-based data from the
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), which
showed annual global land and ocean temperature to be the fourth
highest on record
Across the world’s land
surfaces only, the 2013 global temperature was about 0.85°C above
the 1961−1990 average and about 0.06°C above the 2001−2010
average. This is the fourth warmest on record, partly due to a very
warm November–December period.
With ENSO-neutral
conditions prevailing, an exceptional warmth was observed in the
Great Australian Bight and adjacent waters, parts of the north east
and south central Pacific Ocean, and much of the Arctic Ocean and the
global ocean surface temperature for 2013 was the highest since 2010.
It tied with 2004 and 2006 as the sixth warmest on record, at 0.35°C
above the 1961−1990 average and equal to the most recent 2001−2010
average.
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