European climate agency says this will likely be the hottest year on
record -- again
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[November 07, 2024]
By MELINA WALLING
CHICAGO (AP) — For the second year in a row, Earth will almost certainly
be the hottest it's ever been. And for the first time, the globe this
year reached more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of
warming compared to the pre-industrial average, the European climate
agency Copernicus said Thursday.
“It's this relentless nature of the warming that I think is is
worrying,” said Carlo Buontempo, director of Copernicus.
Buontempo said the data clearly shows the planet would not see such a
long sequence of record-breaking temperatures without the constant
increase of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere driving global warming.
He cited other factors that contribute to exceptionally warm years like
last year and this one. They include El Nino — the temporary warming of
parts of the Pacific that changes weather worldwide — as well as
volcanic eruptions that spew water vapor into the air and variations in
energy from the sun. But he and other scientists say the long-term
increase in temperatures beyond fluctuations like El Nino is a bad sign.
“A very strong El Nino event is a sneak peek into what the new normal
will be about a decade from now,” said Zeke Hausfather, a research
scientist with the nonprofit Berkeley Earth.
News of a likely second year of record heat comes a day after Republican
Donald Trump, who has called climate change a “hoax” and promised to
boost oil drilling and production, was reelected to the presidency. It
also comes days before the next U.N. climate conference, called COP29,
is set to begin in Azerbaijan. Talks are expected to focus on how to
generate trillions of dollars to help the world transition to clean
energes like wind and solar, and thus avoid continued warming.
Buontempo pointed out that going over the 1.5 degree Celsius (2.7
degrees Fahrenheit) threshold of warming for a single year is different
than the goal adopted in the 2015 Paris Agreement. That goal was meant
to try to cap warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit)
since pre-industrial times on average, over 20 or 30 years.
A United Nations report this year said that since the mid-1800s on
average, the world has already heated up 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3
degrees Fahrenheit) — up from previous estimates of 1.1 degrees (2
degrees Fahrenheit) or 1.2 degrees (2.2 degrees Fahrenheit). That's of
concern because the U.N. says the greenhouse gas emission reduction
goals of the world's nations still aren't nearly ambitious enough to
keep the 1.5 degree Celsius target on track.
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Counselor Izzy Kellar, of Dayton, Ohio, fills up her campers' water
bottles, June 20, 2024, at YMCA Camp Kern in Oregonia, Ohio. (AP
Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)
The target was chosen to try to
stave off the worst effects of climate change on humanity, including
extreme weather. “The heat waves, storm damage, and droughts that we
are experiencing now are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Natalie
Mahowald, chair of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Cornell
University.
Going over that number in 2024 doesn’t mean the overall trend line
of global warming has, but “in the absence of concerted action, it
soon will,” said University of Pennsylvania climate scientist
Michael Mann.
Stanford University climate scientist Rob Jackson put it in starker
terms. “I think we have missed the 1.5 degree window,” said Jackson,
who chairs the Global Carbon Project, a group of scientists who
track countries’ carbon dioxide emissions. “There’s too much
warming.”
Indiana state climatologist Beth Hall said she isn't surprised by
the latest report from Copernicus, but emphasized that people should
remember climate is a global issue beyond their local experiences
with changing weather. “We tend to be siloed in our own individual
world,” she said. Reports like this one “are taking into account
lots and lots of locations that aren’t in our backyard.”
Buontempo stressed the importance of global observations, bolstered
by international cooperation, that allow scientists to have
confidence in the new report's finding: Copernicus gets its results
from billions of measurements from satellites, ships, aircraft and
weather stations around the world.
He said that going over the 1.5 degree Celsius (2.7 degrees
Fahrenheit) benchmark this year is “psychologically important” as
nations make decisions internally and approach negotiations at the
annual U.N. climate change summit Nov. 11-22 in Azerbaijan.
“The decision, clearly, is ours. It’s of each and every one of us.
And it’s the decision of our society and our policymakers as a
consequence of that,” he said. “But I believe these decisions are
better made if they are based on evidence and facts.”
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