‘Warming
stripes’ represent annual temperatures from 1850 to 2019, with darker reds
representing the warmest years. Photograph: Ed Hawkins
Climate
emergency: 2019 was second hottest year on record
Last decade
was also hottest yet in 150 years of measurements, say scientists
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Wed 15 Jan
2020 16.09 GMTLast modified on Wed 15 Jan 2020 18.28 GMT
The year 2019
was the second hottest on record for the planet’s surface, according to latest
research. The analyses reveal the scale of the climate crisis: both the past
five years and the past decade are the hottest in 150 years.
The
succession of records being broken year after year is “the drumbeat of the
Anthropocene”, said one scientist, and is bringing increasingly severe storms,
floods, droughts and wildfires.
The
previous hottest year was in 2016, the year that a natural El Niño event
boosted temperatures. The new data is for the average global surface air
temperature. More than 90% of the heat trapped by human greenhouse gas
emissions is absorbed by the oceans, but on Monday scientists revealed 2019 as
the warmest yet recorded in the seas, calling it “dire news”.
The average
temperature in 2019 was about 1.1C above the average from 1850-1900, before
large-scale fossil fuel burning began. The world’s scientists have warned that
global heating beyond 1.5C will significantly worsen extreme weather and
suffering for hundreds of millions of people.
The World
Economic Forum’s global risk assessment for the next decade, also published on
Wednesday, found the top five dangers were all environmental, including extreme
weather, failure to prepare for climate change and the destruction of the
natural world.
“The last
decade was easily the warmest decade in the record and is the first decade more
than 1C above late 19th-century temperatures,” said Gavin Schmidt, of Nasa’s
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which produced one of the temperature
records.
“What is
important is the totality of evidence from multiple independent data sets that
the Earth is warming, that human activity is driving it and the impacts are
clearly being felt,” he said. “These announcements might sound like a broken
record, but what is being heard is the drumbeat of the Anthropocene.”
“It’s now official that we have just completed
the warmest decade on record, a reminder that the planet continues to warm as
we continue to burn fossil fuels,” said Prof Michael Mann at Penn State
University in the US.
While instrumental
temperature records stretch back to 1850, data from ice cores indicate that
today’s temperatures were last seen at least 100,000 years ago. Furthermore,
the level of carbon dioxide is the highest it has been for several million
years, when the sea level was 15-20 metres higher.
The four
temperature datasets are compiled from many millions of surface temperature
measurements taken across the globe, from all continents and all oceans. They
are produced by the UK Met Office with the University of East Anglia (UEA),
both Nasa and Noaa in the US, and Europe’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.
Small differences between the analyses arise from how data-sparse polar regions
are treated, but all agree that the past five years are the warmest five years
since each global record began.
The Met
Office’s forecast for global average temperature for 2020 suggests this year
could well set another record and is very likely to be among the top three
hottest. The UK government will host a critical UN climate summit in Glasgow in
November. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, and many others are
urging nations to increase dramatically their pledges to cut carbon emissions,
which would lead to global temperatures rising by a disastrous 3-4C.
“It is
obvious we are not succeeding in preventing dangerous anthropogenic
interference with the climate system, which was the main goal of the original
1992 UN climate change convention,” said Bob Ward, of the Grantham Research
Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics.
“Even if we
succeed in limiting warming to 1.5C, this would not be a ‘safe’ level of
warming for the world,” he said. “Therefore we must focus on cutting global
emissions to net zero as soon as possible. We know the transition to a net zero
economy is the growth story of the 21st century.”
Rosie
Rogers, of Greenpeace UK, said: “We’re breaking more records than Usain Bolt,
but there are no gold medals for dangerous temperature rises, or the floods and
fires that come with it. We cannot run away from the climate emergency.”
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