Last
year was warmest ever that didn't feature an El Niño, report finds
State
of the climate report found 2017 was the third warmest with a record
high sea level and destructive coral bleaching
1
August, 2018
Last
year was the warmest ever recorded on Earth that didn’t feature an
El Niño, a periodic climatic event that warms the Pacific Ocean,
according to the state
of the climate repot
by 500
climate scientists from around the world, overseen by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and released by the
American Meteorological Society.
Climate
change cast a long shadow in 2017, with the planet experiencing
soaring temperatures, retreating sea ice, a record high sea level,
shrinking glaciers and the most destructive coral bleaching event on
record.
Number of hot days each year since 1950, relative to the 1961-1990 baseline. Photograph: Noaa
Overall,
2017 was third warmest year on record, Noaa said, behind 2016 and
2015. Countries including Spain, Bulgaria, Mexico and Argentina all
broke their annual high temperature records.
Puerto
Madryn in Argentina reached 43.4C (110.12F), the warmest temperature
ever recorded so far south in the world, while Turbat in Pakistan
baked in 53.5C (128.3F), the global record temperature for May.
Concentrations
of planet-warming carbon dioxide continued on an upward march,
reaching 405 parts per million in the atmosphere. This is 2.2ppm
greater than 2016 and is the highest level discernible in modern
records, as well as ice cores that show CO2 levels back as far as
800,000 years. The growth rate of CO2 has quadrupled since the early
1960s.
The
consequences of this heat, which follows a string of warm years, was
felt around the world in 2017.
In
May of last year, ice extent in the Arctic reached its lowest maximum
level in the 37-year satellite record, covering 8% less area than the
long-term average.
The Arctic experienced the sort of warmth that
scientists say hasn’t been been present in the region for the last
2,000 years, with some regions 3 or 4 degrees Celsius hotter than an
average recorded since 1982. Antarctic sea ice was also below average
throughout 2017.
Land-based
ice mirrored these reversals, with the world’s glaciers losing mass
for the 38th consecutive year on record. According to the report, the
total ice loss since 1980 is the equivalent to slicing 22 metres off
the top of the average glacier.
Prolonged
warmth in the seas helped spur a huge coral bleaching event, which is
when coral reefs become stressed by high temperatures and expel their
symbiotic algae. This causes them to whiten and, in some cases, die
off.
A
three-year stretch to May 2017 was the “longest, most widespread
and almost certainty most destructive” coral bleaching event on
record, the report states, taking a notable toll on places such as
the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Global average sea levels
reached the highest level in the 25-year satellite record, 7.2cm
(3in) above the 1993 average.
“I
find it quite stunning, really, how these record temperatures have
affected ocean ecosystems,” said Gregory Johnson, an oceanographer
at Noaa.
There
were several major rainfall events in 2017 contributing to a wetter
than normal year, with the Indian monsoon season claiming around 800
lives and devastating floods occurring in Venezuela and Nigeria.
Global fire activity was at the lowest level since 2003, however.
While
exceptionally warm years could occur without human influence, the
rapidly advancing field of climate change attribution science has
made it clear the broad sweep of changes taking place on Earth would
be virtually impossible without greenhouse gas emissions from human
activity.
The
loss of glaciers and coral reefs threaten the food and water supplies
of hundreds of millions of people, while heatwaves, flooding,
wildfires and increasingly powerful storms are also a severe risk to
human life.
These
dangers have been highlighted in stunning fashion this year, with a
scorching global heatwave causing multiple deaths from Canada to
Japan, while wildfires have caused further fatalties in places such
as Greece and the western US.
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