Last year tied as world's fifth-warmest on record, U.S. scientists say
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[January 13, 2023]
By Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Last year was the world's joint fifth-warmest on
record and the last nine years were the nine warmest since
pre-industrial times, putting the 2015 Paris Agreement's goal to limit
global warming to 1.5C in serious jeopardy, U.S. scientists said on
Thursday.
Last year tied with 2015 as the fifth-warmest year since record-keeping
began in 1880, NASA said. That was despite the presence of the La Nina
weather pattern in the Pacific Ocean, which generally lowers global
temperatures slightly.
The world's average global temperature is now 1.1C to 1.2C higher than
in pre-industrial times.
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on
Thursday it had ranked 2022 as the sixth warmest since 1880. European
Union scientists this week said 2022 was the fifth warmest year in their
records.
Climate assessments produce slightly different rankings depending on the
data sources used and the way records account for minor data alterations
over time, for example, a weather station being moved to a new location.
NASA said temperatures were increasing by more than 0.2C per decade,
putting the world on track to blow past the 2015 Paris Agreement's goal
to limit global warming to 1.5C to avoid its most devastating
consequences.
"At the rate that we're going, it's not going to take more than two
decades to get us to that. And the only way that we're not going to do
that is if we stop putting greenhouse gases into the atmosphere," said
Gavin Schmidt, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
Schmidt said he expected 2023 to be slightly warmer than 2022, due to a
weaker La Nina cooling phenomenon.
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The sun rises behind the London skyline
as a second heatwave is predicted for parts of the country, Richmond
Park, London, Britain, August 8, 2022. REUTERS/Toby Melville
"The global mean temperature will be even higher in 10 years from
now," said ETH Zurich climate scientist Sonia Seneviratne, adding
that unless countries stopped burning CO2-emitting fossil fuels
temperatures would continue to climb.
WEATHER EXTREMES
The changing climate fuelled weather extremes across the planet in
2022. Europe suffered its hottest summer on record, while in
Pakistan floods killed 1,700 people and wrecked infrastructure,
drought ravaged crops in Uganda and wildfires ripped through
Mediterranean countries.
Despite most of the world's major emitters pledging to eventually
slash their net emissions to zero, global CO2 emissions continue to
rise.
Concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere last year reached levels not
experienced on earth for 3 million years, Schmidt said.
At this year's COP28 climate conference, countries will formally
assess their progress towards the Paris Agreement's 1.5C goal - and
the far faster emissions cuts needed to meet it.
COP28 host the United Arab Emirates on Thursday appointed the head
of its state-owned oil company as president of the conference,
sparking concerns among campaigners and scientists about the fossil
fuel industry's influence in the talks.
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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