Mountains nearly devoid of snow stand behind a
road and a polar bear warning sign during a summer heatwave on Svalbard
archipelago in July near Longyearbyen, Norway.
Last decade was Earth's hottest on record as climate
crisis accelerates
2019 was second or third hottest year ever recorded
Average global temperature up 0.39C in 10 years
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Wed 12 Aug
2020 16.51 BSTLast modified on Wed 12 Aug 2020 17.02 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/12/hottest-decade-climate-crisis-2019
The past
decade was the hottest ever recorded globally, with 2019 either the second or
third warmest year on record, as the climate crisis accelerated temperatures
upwards worldwide, scientists have confirmed.
Every
decade since 1980 has been warmer than the preceding decade, with the period
between 2010 and 2019 the hottest yet since worldwide temperature records began
in the 19th century. The increase in average global temperature is rapidly
gathering pace, with the last decade up to 0.39C warmer than the long-term
average, compared with a 0.07C average increase per decade stretching back to
1880.
The past
six years, 2014 to 2019, have been the warmest since global records began, a
period that has included enormous heatwaves in the US, Europe and India,
freakishly hot temperatures in the Arctic, and deadly wildfires from Australia
to California to Greece.
Last year
was either the second hottest year ever recorded, according to Nasa and the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or the third hottest year, as
recorded by the UK Met Office. Overall, the world has heated up by about 1C on
average since the pre-industrial era.
“As this
latest assessment comprehensively confirms, we have just witnessed the warmest
decade on record,” said Michael Mann, a climate scientist at Penn State
University. “As other recent reports confirm, we must act dramatically over
this next decade, bringing emissions down by a factor of two, if we are to
limit warming below catastrophic levels of 1.5C that will commit us to
ever-more dangerous climate change impacts.
“This is
something every American should think about as they vote in the upcoming
presidential election.”
The report,
compiled by 520 scientists from more than 60 countries and published in the
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, outlines the myriad ways that
rising temperatures are altering the planet and human life, including:
Sea-surface temperatures were the second warmest
on record last year, surpassed only by 2016. The heating up of the ocean and
melting of glaciers caused global sea levels to hit a new high point of 3.4
inches above what they were, on average, 30 years ago.
Greenhouse gas levels hit their highest level
ever recorded in 2019. Concentrations of these planet-warming gases, including
carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, are now higher than any period
measured by modern instruments or ice cores dating back 800,000 years.
The polar regions of the Arctic and Antarctic
experienced their second hottest year on record. The loss of ice from the poles
is helping push sea levels upwards, imperiling coastal cities around the world.
The consequences of the climate crisis are being
felt around the world, including recent widespread flooding across east Africa
and wildfires in Australia, the Amazon and Siberia.
Robert Dunn, a climate scientist at the UK Met
Office, said that the start of this millennium has been warmer than any
comparable period since the industrial revolution.
“A number
of extreme events, such as wildfires, heatwaves and droughts, have at least
part of their root linked to the rise in global temperature,” he said “The view
for 2019 is that climate indicators and observations show that the global
climate is continuing to change rapidly.”

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