Greenland
Ice Sheet Melting 600 Percent Faster Than Predicted by Current Models
The world’s oceans are storing up staggering amounts of heat — and it’s even more than we thought
10
March, 201
The
world is getting warmer every year, thanks to climate change — but
where exactly most of that heat is going may be a surprise.
As
a stunning early spring blooms across the United States, just weeks
after scientists declared 2016 the hottest
year on record,
it’s easy to forget that all the extra warmth in the air accounts
for only a fraction of the heat produced by greenhouse gas emissions.
In fact, more than 90 percent of it gets stored in the ocean. And
now, scientists think they’ve calculated just how much the ocean
has warmed in the past few decades.
A new
study,
out Friday in the journal Science Advances, suggests that since 1960,
a staggering 337 zetajoules of energy — that’s 337 followed by 21
zeros — has been added to the ocean in the form of heat. And
most of it has occurred since 1980.
“The
ocean is the memory of all of the past climate change,” said study
co-author Kevin
Trenberth,
a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
The
new value is a number that significantly exceeds previous estimates,
Trenberth noted. Compared with ocean warming estimates produced by
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the new values are
about 13 percent greater. This is the result of a new methodology for
estimating ocean warming, involving a series of steps “that really
make this paper different than previous ones,” Trenberth told The
Washington Post.
In
previous decades, there have been a lot of challenges associated with
monitoring temperature changes in the ocean. Before the year 2000 or
so, most monitoring instruments had to be deployed from ships. This
mean that scientists only had the most reliable data for parts of the
world that lie along major shipping routes.
In
the past 15 years, though, scientists have developed the “Argo”
network, a system of free-drifting devices that are designed to
periodically adjust their buoyancy, so they can sink several thousand
meters into the sea, collect measurements, and then rise back up to
the surface. There are now about 3,500 of these devices deployed
throughout the world’s oceans, leading to a much better dispersal
of observations.
The
new study, which was led by Lijing Cheng of the Chinese Academy of
Sciences and included other scientists from that institution, from
the National Center for Atmospheric Research, and from the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, employs a new methodology for
using both the recent Argo measurements and past observations from
ships to produce a continuous series of estimates from 1960 to 2015.
The
scientists incorporated an updated database of pre-Argo measurements
that have been corrected for certain biases, as well as information
from climate models, and extended existing observations of ocean
conditions taken at specific locations to larger areas of the sea.
They then conducted a comparison of recent Argo data with
measurements created using their new methodology and found that the
method produces true-to-life results.
The
results suggest that the ocean has been sucking up more heat than
previous research has indicated. In fact, according to Trenberth, the
new estimates help explain observations of global sea-level rise that
scientists have had difficulty accounting for until now.
A
certain percentage of sea-level rise can be attributed to the
expansion of ocean water, caused by rising water temperatures, while
the rest comes from melting glaciers. Scientists have good estimates
of how much melting ice is going into the ocean, but they’ve come
up a bit short in the past in trying to reconcile the rest of the
planet’s observed sea-level rise with their estimates of how much
the ocean has warmed in recent decades.
“This
actually fills in the gap,” Trenberth said.
The
study also suggests that the extra heat is not being stored evenly
throughout the oceans. The Atlantic and Southern oceans, in
particular, are the biggest new heat reservoirs, the results
indicate, storing about 59 percent of the heat despite accounting for
less than half of all the ocean area in the world.
The
researchers think the reason has to do with a major ocean current
system known as “overturning circulation.” This system is kind of
like a giant ocean conveyor belt that runs warm water from the
equator toward the poles, where it cools, sinks to the bottom of the
oceans and flows back in the other direction. The system helps
transport both heat around the world, and the overturning process is
pronounced in both the Atlantic and Southern ocean waters.
While
the paper’s staggering new results reaffirm the importance of the
ocean as a climate change buffer — without it, much of that heat
would remain in the atmosphere or the earth’s land masses — it’s
certainly not without consequences. Rising ocean temperatures are
believed to be a major cause of the mass coral bleaching that’s
occurred all over the world over the past several years, in
conjunction with an unusually strong El Niño beginning in 2015.
It’s
still unclear how other organisms might be affected, but many marine
animals thrive best within specific temperature ranges. Many marine
biologists believe that continued warming, along with other
climate-related changes such as ocean acidification, may force
certain species to migrate to cooler or deeper areas in the future.
Trenberth
added that increasing heat moving into the surface of the ocean could
also lead to “dead spots” in the ocean — places where layers of
warm water get stuck on top of layers of cooler water. When this
stratification happens, it can become more difficult for the waters
to mix and churn as they normally would, a process that helps stir up
nutrients and oxygen that are vital to marine organisms.
All
this is to say that climate change affects far more than just our air
temperature — and the new study documents its clear progression in
places thousands of meters below the surface of the sea. The results
also come at a sensitive point for ocean and climate research, just a
week after The Washington Post revealed a proposal from the Trump
administration that calls for significant budget cuts for the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, including a 26
percent cut for its Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research. It’s
the primary research arm of NOAA, Trenberth pointed out, and such
drastic cuts to the program could mean even basic observations
programs like Argo may no longer continue.
“As
a result, the information will not even be there,” Trenberth said.
“That would be tragic.”
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