Record
hot years almost certainly caused by man-made warming
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[January 25, 2016]
By Alister Doyle
OSLO (Reuters) - A record-breaking string
of hot years since 2000 is almost certainly a sign of man-made global
warming, with vanishingly small chances that it was caused by random,
natural swings, a study showed on Monday.
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Last year was the hottest since records began in the 19th century
in a trend that almost all scientists blame on greenhouse gases from
burning of fossil fuels, stoking heat waves, droughts, downpours and
rising sea levels.
"Recent observed runs of record temperatures are extremely unlikely
to have occurred in the absence of human-caused global warming," a
U.S.-led team of experts wrote in the journal Scientific Reports.
Written before 2015 temperature data were released, it estimated the
chance of the record run - with up to 13 of the 15 warmest years all
from 2000 to 2014 - was between one in 770 and one in 10,000 if the
series were random with no human influence.
Lead author Michael Mann, a professor of meteorology at Pennsylvania
State University, told Reuters that the group's computer simulations
indicated those odds including 2015 had widened to between one in
1,250 and one in 13,000.
"Climate change is real, human-caused and no longer subtle - we're
seeing it play out before our eyes," he wrote in an e-mail. Natural
variations include shifts in the sun's output or volcanic eruptions,
which dim sunlight.
"Natural climate variations just can't explain the observed recent
global heat records, but man-made global warming can," Stefan
Rahmstorf, a co-author from the Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact,
said in a statement.
The scientists tried to account for factors including that heat from
one warm year spills over into the next. And temperatures in many
years are almost identical, making it hard to rank their heat with
confidence.
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Last month, almost 190 nations agreed at a summit in Paris to the
strongest deal yet to shift from fossil fuels towards cleaner
energies such as wind and solar power to limit warming.
Separately on Monday, the U.N.'s World Meteorological Organization
(WMO) confirmed U.S. and British data showing 2015 was by far the
hottest year on record and noted that a powerful El Nino event,
warming the surface of the Pacific Ocean, had stoked extra heat.
"The power of El Nino will fade in the coming months but the impacts
of human-induced climate change will be with us for many decades,"
WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said.
(Reporting By Alister Doyle; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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