CC: Donald J. Trump.
Severe weather events like drought and flood have been attributed to global temperature rises. (Supplied: Helen Kidd) |
In the words of Bob Dylan, “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.” And you almost certainly didn’t need a thermometer to tell 2016 was a scorcher.
The first global analysis of 2016 climate data is out, confirming what many scientists had predicted: Last year was the hottest on record,
surpassing the 2015 record by 0.2 degrees Celsius (0.36 degrees
Fahrenheit), the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service
announced Thursday.
Earth, the agency concluded, is “on the edge.”
In 2016, the average global
surface temperature soared to around 14.8 degrees Celsius (58.6 degrees
Fahrenheit), approximately 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit)
above pre-industrial times, the earth observation program said.
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Copernicus found that
temperatures, fueled by climate change and a strong El Nino, peaked in
February at about 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times ― a warming benchmark that nearly 200 countries are striving to hold temperatures below as part of last year’s historic Paris climate pact.
In a statement accompanying
the findings, Copernicus Director Juan Garcés de Marcilla said the
effects of climate change are being felt around the world.
“Land and sea temperatures
are rising along with sea levels, while the world’s sea-ice extent,
glacier volume and snow cover are decreasing; rainfall patterns are
changing and climate-related extremes such as heat waves, floods and
droughts are increasing in frequency and intensity for many regions,”
Marcilla said. “The future impact of climate change will depend on the
effort we make now, in part achieved by better sharing of climate
knowledge and information.”
In October, Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, predicted 2016 would go down as the hottest year on record. One month later, the United Nations World Meteorological Organization made the same dire forecast.
In a post Thursday on
Twitter, Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the U.N.’s Framework
Convention on Climate Change, called the Copernicus analysis “another
wake-up call.”
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NASA and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are scheduled to release their
own annual global temperature reports later this month. If projections
hold, both agencies will confirm 2016 as the third consecutive
record-setting year, after 2014 and 2015 both topped the charts for global temperatures.
Despite all-but-unanimous scientific consensus about climate change, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has said he remains skeptical. He has dismissed climate change as “bullshit,” a Chinese “hoax,” and, according to his incoming chief of staff Reince Priebus, “a bunch of bunk.” Trump has promised to pull the U.S. out of the Paris climate agreement and cut all federal spending related to the issue.
Links
Links
- 2016 Was The Hottest Year Ever On Australia’s East Coast, Confirms Bureau Of Meteorology
- Annual climate statement 2016
- Australia Had Extreme Weather and Fourth-Hottest Year in 2016
- 2016 was Sydney's hottest year on record
- Record-breaking extreme weather in Australia in 2016 devastates ecosystems
- Earth on the edge: Record breaking 2016 was close to 1.5°C warming
- 2016 'hottest on record' in new sign of global warming, Copernicus organisation says
- 2016 an 'eventful year' of extreme weather events, bureau says
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