The world's climate is not only continuing to warm, it is
also adding heat-trapping greenhouse gases even faster than
in the past, researchers said today.
Indeed, the global temperature has been warmer than the 20th
century average every month for more than 25 years, they said
at a teleconference.
"The indicators show unequivocally that the world continues
to warm," Thomas R. Karl, director of the National Climatic
Data Center, said in releasing the annual State of the
Climate report for 2010.
"There is a clear and unmistakable signal from the top of the
atmosphere to the depths of the oceans," added Peter Thorne
of the Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites,
North Carolina State University.
Carbon dioxide increased by 2.60 parts per million in the
atmosphere in 2010, which is more than the average annual
increase seen from 1980-2010, Karl added. Carbon dioxide is
the major greenhouse gas accumulating in the air that
atmospheric scientists blame for warming the climate.
The warmer conditions are consistent with events such as
heatwaves and extreme rainfall, Karl said at a
teleconference. However, it is more difficult to make a
direct connection with things like tornado outbreaks, he
said.
"Any single weather event is driven by a number of factors,
from local conditions to global climate patterns and trends.
Climate change is one of these," he said. "It is very likely
that large-scale changes in climate, such as increased
moisture in the atmosphere and warming temperatures, have
influenced - and will continue to influence - many different
types of extreme events, such as heavy rainfall, flooding,
heat waves and droughts."
The report, being published by the American Meteorological
Society, lists 2010 as tied with 2005 for the warmest year on
record, according to studies by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and NASA. A separate analysis,
done in Britain, lists 2010 as second warmest.
Deke Arndt, chief of the Climate Monitoring Branch at NCDC,
noted that every month since early 1985 has been warmer than
the 20th century average for the month.
Even more willing to attribute extreme weather events to
climate change were speakers at a second briefing organised
by the Pew Center on Climate Change.
"Scientists have concluded just recently that the link
between climate change and extreme weather is not so much
theoretical any more as it is observational," Fred Guterl ,
executive editor of Scientific American magazine, said
at that teleconference.
"Climate change is a risk factor for extreme weather just as
eating salty foods is a risk factor for heart disease," said
Jay Gulledge, director of the Science & Impacts Program
at the Pew Center. "That doesn't mean we can predict the next
flood in Iowa or drought in Georgia ... but it means they are
more likely."
Meanwhile, a separate report from the Cooperative Institute
for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of
Colorado said the Earth is getting thicker around the middle
due to ice loss from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.
"If you imagine the Earth is like a soccer ball and you push
down on the North Pole, it would bulge out at its 'equator,"'
said CIRES fellow Steve Nerem, co-author of the study.
At the NOAA briefing, Karl added that the Greenland ice sheet
lost more mass last year than any year in the last decade.
Melting of the land-based ice sheets in places like
Greenland, Antarctica and other regions has raised concerns
about rising sea levels worldwide.
"The arctic is changing faster that most of the rest of the
world," added Walt Meier, a research scientist at the
National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado.
"This has long been expected." In addition, he said, the
September Arctic sea ice extent was the third smallest in 30
years, older, thicker sea ice is disappearing, there is a
shorter duration of snow cover, and the permafrost is
melting.
Thorne added that the conclusion that the earth is warming
does not rest on a single type of data.
The 2010 report adds information on lake surfaces and
permafrost temperatures for the first time, bringing the
total number of climate indicators considered to 41. The
report involved 368 researchers from 45 countries.
Other findings of the report:
- Alpine glaciers shrank for the 20th consecutive year.
- Even with a moderate-to-strong La Nina during the latter
half of the year, which is associated with cooler equatorial
waters in the tropical Pacific, the 2010 average global sea
surface temperature was third warmest on record and sea level
continued to rise.
- Oceans were saltier than average in areas of high
evaporation and fresher than average in areas of high
precipitation, suggesting that the water cycle is
intensifying.
- A strong warm El Nino climate pattern at the beginning of
2010 transitioned to a cool La Nina by July, contributing to
some unusual weather patterns around the world and impacting
global regions in different ways.
- Tropical cyclone activity was below normal in nearly all
basins around the globe, especially in much of the Pacific
Ocean. The Atlantic basin was the exception, with near-record
high North Atlantic basin hurricane activity.
- Heavy rains led to a record wet spring (September to
November) in Australia, ending a decade-long drought.
- The Arctic Oscillation affected large parts of the Northern
Hemisphere causing frigid arctic air to plunge southward and
warm air to surge northward. Canada had its warmest year on
record while Britain had its coldest winter at the beginning
of the year and coldest December at the end of the year.
- An atmospheric pattern related to the strength and
persistence of the storm track circling the Antarctic led to
an all-time maximum in 2010 of average sea ice volume in the
Antarctic.
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