Global
warming to pick up in 2015, 2016: experts
14
September, 2015
Man-made
global warming is set to produce exceptionally high average
temperatures this year and next, boosted by natural weather phenomena
such as El Nino, Britain's top climate and weather body said in a
report Monday.
"It
looks very likely that globally 2014, 2015 and 2016 will all be
amongst the very warmest years ever recorded," Rowan Sutton of
the National Centre for Atmospheric Science, which contributed to
the report,
told journalists.
"This
is not a fluke," he said. "We are seeing the effects of
energy steadily accumulating in the Earth's oceans and atmosphere,
caused by greenhouse
gas emissions."
The
rate at which global
temperatures are
increasing is also on track to pick up in the coming years, ending a
period of more than a decade in which the pace of warming worldwide
had appeared to slow down, the report said.
This
"pause" has been seized upon by sceptics as evidence that
climate change was driven more by natural cycles than human activity.
Some
scientists, however, argue that there was no significant slowdown,
pointing instead to flawed calculations.
The
20-page report from Britain's Met Office, entitled "Big changes
underway in the climate system?", highlights current transitions
in major weather patterns that affect rainfall and temperatures at a
regional level.
An
El Nino weather pattern centered in the tropical Pacific Ocean is
"well underway", the report says, and shaping up to be one
of the most intense on record. Very strong El Ninos also occurred
over the winters of 1997 and 1982.
Set
to grow stronger in the coming months, the current El Nino—a result
of shifting winds and ocean circulation—is likely to result is dry
conditions in parts of Asia and Australia, as well as southern and
sub-Saharan North Africa, the Met Office said.
By
contrast, the southwestern United States—including parched
California, suffering from an historic drought—has a strong chance
of seeing higher-than-average rainfall.
El
Ninos also affect tropical storms, making them less likely in the
North Atlantic and more intense in the West Pacific, where they are
known as typhoons.
Overall,
an El Nino is also likely to add a little heat to the general impact
of global warming.
Meanwhile,
warming sea
surface temperatures along
the North American west coast point to a reversal of another natural
pattern called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.
Warming sea surface temperatures along the North American west coast point to a reversal of another natural pattern called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation
This,
too, could temporarily nudge regional temperatures higher, but has
yet to be confirmed, the report said.
Finally,
the interplay of ocean currents and atmosphere in the
Atlantic—another multi-decade oscillation—is moving the other
way, and will have a cooling effect.
"The
current warm phase is now 20 years long and historical precedent
suggests a return to relatively cool conditions could occur within a
few years," the report says.
By
itself, that would mean cooler and drying summers in northern Europe,
and increased rainfall in the northeastern United States.
While
all of these cyclical forces affect weather and temperatures
trends, global
warming is
the main driver of change today, the report concluded.
"We
know that natural patterns contribute to global temperature in
any given year, but very warm temperatures so far this year indicate
the continued impact of increasing greenhouse gases," said
Stephen Belcher, director of the Met Office Hadley Centre.
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