Thursday, 11 May 2017

Global warming set to increase because of a warming Pacific


Another incredibly conservative article in NZ media based on research that only looks at one aspect instead of the combination of many positive feedbacks – one, looking at the original article attracts comments all from deniers.


It doesn’t matter what any of these brainless nincimpoops thinks because reality trumps fantasy.

Every new report is dire but never catches up with the real situation.

'False sense of security': Global warming looks set to accelerate, study finds



11 May, 2017


The pace of global warming is likely to quicken in coming years as natural processes in the Pacific switch from serving as a brake to an accelerator, placing the planet on course to exceed a landmark level within a decade, according to a new paper.

The Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO), a cycle that lasts 10-30 years and affects how much heat is absorbed in the Pacific, started to switch to its positive or "warm" phase since 2014. During positive periods, the central ocean is relatively warm compared with surface waters at higher latitudes.

The paper by Melbourne University researchers, published this week in Geophysical Research Letters, argues the preceding negative phase - lasting from 2000-2014 - may have provided a "temporary buffer" for surface temperature increases and "cushioned the impacts of global warming on extreme events, such as heatwaves".
This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
SUPPLIED
This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
"A turnaround of the IPO to its positive phase could initiate a period of accelerated warming over the next one or two decades," Ben Henley and Andrew King state. "This would likely lead to the Paris target of 1.5 degrees (warming since pre-industrial times) being surpassed within the next decade."
"The negative phase might have lulled us into a false sense of security - the planet appears temporarily to not be warming as fast," Henley, an associate of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, told Fairfax Media.

Almost 200 nations signed up to the Paris accord in late 2015, agreeing to keep temperature rises between 1.5 to 2 degrees to prevent dangerous climate change. President Donald Trump this week postponed a meeting of advisers that was expected to decide whether the US will exit the climate deal.

The IPO is less well known and studied than the El Nino Southern Oscillation, a five to seven year cycle that also has a planet-wide influence on the weather. A strong El Nino in 2015-2016 helped boost background warming, making 2015 and then 2016 the hottest years on record. 

Depending on the data used, global surface temperatures have warmed more than a degree compared with the baseline readings for 1850-1900. 

The pace of global warming is likely to quicken in coming years as natural processes in the Pacific switch from serving as a brake to an accelerator, placing the planet on course to exceed a landmark level within a decade, according to a new paper.

The Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO), a cycle that lasts 10-30 years and affects how much heat is absorbed in the Pacific, started to switch to its positive or "warm" phase since 2014. During positive periods, the central ocean is relatively warm compared with surface waters at higher latitudes.

The paper by Melbourne University researchers, published this week in Geophysical Research Letters, argues the preceding negative phase - lasting from 2000-2014 - may have provided a "temporary buffer" for surface temperature increases and "cushioned the impacts of global warming on extreme events, such as heatwaves".

This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
SUPPLIED
This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
"A turnaround of the IPO to its positive phase could initiate a period of accelerated warming over the next one or two decades," Ben Henley and Andrew King state. "This would likely lead to the Paris target of 1.5 degrees (warming since pre-industrial times) being surpassed within the next decade."
"The negative phase might have lulled us into a false sense of security - the planet appears temporarily to not be warming as fast," Henley, an associate of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, told Fairfax Media.

Almost 200 nations signed up to the Paris accord in late 2015, agreeing to keep temperature rises between 1.5 to 2 degrees to prevent dangerous climate change. President Donald Trump this week postponed a meeting of advisers that was expected to decide whether the US will exit the climate deal.

The IPO is less well known and studied than the El Nino Southern Oscillation, a five to seven year cycle that also has a planet-wide influence on the weather. A strong El Nino in 2015-2016 helped boost background warming, making 2015 and then 2016 the hottest years on record. 

Depending on the data used, global surface temperatures have warmed more than a degree compared with the baseline readings for 1850-1900. 

The pace of global warming is likely to quicken in coming years as natural processes in the Pacific switch from serving as a brake to an accelerator, placing the planet on course to exceed a landmark level within a decade, according to a new paper.

The Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO), a cycle that lasts 10-30 years and affects how much heat is absorbed in the Pacific, started to switch to its positive or "warm" phase since 2014. During positive periods, the central ocean is relatively warm compared with surface waters at higher latitudes.

The paper by Melbourne University researchers, published this week in Geophysical Research Letters, argues the preceding negative phase - lasting from 2000-2014 - may have provided a "temporary buffer" for surface temperature increases and "cushioned the impacts of global warming on extreme events, such as heatwaves".

This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
SUPPLIED

This chart shows how model projections indicate when the 1.5-degree mark will be reached
"A turnaround of the IPO to its positive phase could initiate a period of accelerated warming over the next one or two decades," Ben Henley and Andrew King state. "This would likely lead to the Paris target of 1.5 degrees (warming since pre-industrial times) being surpassed within the next decade."

"The negative phase might have lulled us into a false sense of security - the planet appears temporarily to not be warming as fast," Henley, an associate of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, told Fairfax Media.

Almost 200 nations signed up to the Paris accord in late 2015, agreeing to keep temperature rises between 1.5 to 2 degrees to prevent dangerous climate change. President Donald Trump this week postponed a meeting of advisers that was expected to decide whether the US will exit the climate deal.

The IPO is less well known and studied than the El Nino Southern Oscillation, a five to seven year cycle that also has a planet-wide influence on the weather. A strong El Nino in 2015-2016 helped boost background warming, making 2015 and then 2016 the hottest years on record. 

Depending on the data used, global surface temperatures have warmed more than a degree compared with the baseline readings for 1850-1900. 




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