2014
set to be world's hottest year ever
- Record average temperatures highlight the urgent need to agree a deal on emissions at the UN climate change talks in Lima
3
December, 2014
The
world is on course for the hottest year ever in 2014, the United
Nations weather agency said on Wednesday, heightening the sense of
urgency around climate change negotiations underway in Lima.
Preliminary
estimates from the World
Meteorological Organisation (WMO)
found global average land and sea surface temperatures for the first
10 months of 2014 had soared higher than ever recorded.
The
findings – broadly in line with those of the US National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and other scientific agencies –
indicate that by year-end 2014 will break all previous high
temperature records.
The
steady escalation of greenhouse gas emissions, caused by the burning
of fossil fuels, have seen a succession of record-breaking years for
temperature since the dawning of the 21st century and 2014
promises to be no exception, the WMO said.
“Fourteen
of the 15 warmest years on record have all occurred in the 21st
century,” said the WMO’s secretary-general Michel Jarraud. “What
we saw in 2014 is consistent with what we expect from a changing
climate.
“Record-breaking
heat combined with torrential rainfall and floods destroyed
livelihoods and ruined lives. What is particularly unusual and
alarming this year are the high temperatures of vast areas of the
ocean surface, including in the northern hemisphere,” he said.
Christiana
Figueres, the UN’s top climate official, said the findings drove
home the urgency of reaching a deal. Negotiations have been grinding
on for more than 20 years.
“Our
climate is changing and every year the risks of extreme weather
events and impacts on humanity rise,” she said.
Ed
Davey, the UK climate secretary, said the UN climate talks were
critical to stop temperatures rising to dangerous levels. “More
record warm temperatures in the UK and across the world are yet more
evidence that we need to act urgently to prevent dangerous climate
change,” he said.
Officials
from nearly 200 countries will spend the next two weeks in Lima
working to agree on a plan to cut global greenhouse gas emissions
fast enough and deeply enough to limit warming to 2C above
pre-industrial times, the official objective of the UN talks.
But
even that goal – which scientists say may not go far enough to
prevent low-lying island states from drowning in rising seas – may
be moving beyond reach.
“When
confronted with numbers like these, the challenge to stablise global
warming below dangerous levels can seem daunting indeed,” Michael
Mann, the climate scientist, said. “The globe is warming, ice is
melting, and our climate is changing, as a result. And the damage is
being felt – in the forms of more destructive weather extremes,
more devastating wildfires, and unprecedented threats to the survival
of endangered animal species.”
He
said the Lima climate talks – and a summit scheduled for Paris at
the end of next year – were “perhaps our last real opportunity to
stave off truly dangerous and irreversible world-wide changes in our
climate.”
Bill
McKibben, leader of the 350.org campaign group, saw the findings as a
call to arms to climate activists. “If you thought 2014 was hot,
wait ‘til you see 2015. This means we need to turn up the flame
even higher under the fossil fuel companies that are frying our
planet,” he said.
The
WMO report found the global average air temperature over land and sea
surface for January to October was about 0.57C above the average of
14C for the 1961-1990 reference period, and 0.09C above the average
for the past 10 years (2004-2013).
The
most striking evidence of warming was probably in the oceans,
however. Most of the excess heat trapped in the atmosphere by
greenhouse gas emissions ends up in the oceans.
The
WMO said global sea surface temperatures were 0.45C higher than the
average over the last 50 years.
If
November and December continue on the same course, then 2014 will
edge out 2010, 2005 and 1998 as the hottest years ever known – but
only by a few hundredths of a degree. Different data sets also show
slightly different rankings, the WMO said.
In
any event, the trend line is clear. The world is getting warmer,
especially the oceans. Those higher temperatures were already
exacting a toll, in terms of heavy rainfall and flooding in some
countries, and extreme drought in others, the WMO said.
The
agency dismissed outright the notion posed by some climate deniers of
a pause in the warming trend.
“There
is no standstill in global warming,” Jarraud said.
The
world’s big three emitters – the US,
China,
and the
EU –
have pledged new targets for cutting their use of fossil fuels,
injecting optimism into the Lima talks.
But
scientists say even those targets are not enough to limit warming to
2C, and other big carbon polluters such as India, Russia, and
Australia have yet to come on board.
Meanwhile,
there were early
signs of tension between the US and EU over the legal structure of
the agreement that
is due to be adopted in Paris next year.
Campaign
groups monitoring the talks called on negotiators to take the new WMO
findings to heart.
“The
fact that we’re tracking towards the hottest year on record should
send chills through anyone who says they care about climate change –
especially negotiators at the UN climate talks here in Lima,” said
Samantha Smith, who heads WWF’s climate and energy initiative.
“This is more scientific evidence of the real impact climate change
is having on our world. The changes will be felt the most by the most
vulnerable people, whose lives and livelihoods are already being
affected.”
The
WMO found western North America, Europe, eastern Eurasia, much of
Africa, large areas of South America and southern and western
Australia were especially warm. South Africa, Australia, and
Argentina started the year with blistering heat waves.
However,
the US and Canada ushered in 2014 with the chill Arctic winds of the
polar vortex. Central Russia also recorded cooler than average
conditions for the year.
Europe
also experienced extreme weather, with the UK buffetted by storms. A
separate temperature data set, the world’s longest continuous
record, showed
England was on track for the hottest year in over three centuries.
Higher temperatures cause more evaporation and more rain, and 2014
began with England’s wettest
winter in over 250 years,
leading to widespread
flooding.
In
Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, more than two million people
were caught up in severe flooding. Parts of Turkey saw five times the
normal amount of rain, and France experienced its wettest summer
since 1959.
South
Asia also experienced heavy rains, with severe flooding in northern
Bangladesh, northern Pakistan and India, affecting millions of people
in August and September.
For
other parts of the world, however, 2014 brought drought. Rainfall in
parts of the Yellow River basin in China were less than half of the
summer average. A large swathe of the western US continued under
drought. New South Wales and southeast Queensland in Australia also
went without rain.
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