A fireman tackles one of the wildfires that swept through parts of California in October.
Jim Urquhart/Reuters
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We can already say with confidence that 2017 will end up being the warmest non-El Niño year on record, and that it will be warmer than any year before 2015. The average global temperature between January to September this year was roughly 1.1℃ warmer than the pre-industrial average.
This trend is associated with increased greenhouse gas concentrations, and this year we have seen record high global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations and the biggest recorded surge in CO₂ levels.
A year of extremes
Of course, none of us experiences the global average temperature, so we also care about local extreme weather. This year has already seen plenty of extremes.
NASA Earth Observatory |
East Africa saw continued drought with failure of the long rains, coupled with political instability, leading to food insecurity and population displacement, particularly in Somalia.
Storms and fires
This year also saw a very active North Atlantic hurricane season. Parts of the southern United States and the Caribbean were struck by major hurricanes such as Harvey, Irma, and Maria, and are still recovering from the effects.
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There have also been several notable wildfire outbreaks around the world this year. In Western Europe, record June heat and very dry conditions gave rise to severe fires in Portugal. This was followed by more severe fires across Spain and Portugal in October.
Parts of California also experienced severe fires following a wet winter, which promoted plant growth, and then a hot dry summer.
Australia is now gearing up for what is forecast to be a worse-than-average fire season after record winter daytime temperatures. A potential La Niña forming in the Pacific and recent rains in eastern Australia may reduce some of the bushfire risk.
The overall message
So what conclusions can we draw from this year’s extreme weather? It’s certainly clear that humans are warming the climate and increasing the chances of some of the extreme weather we’ve seem in 2017. In particular, many of this year’s heatwaves and hot spells have already been linked to human-caused climate change.
For other events the human influence is harder to determine. For example, the human fingerprint on East Africa’s drought is uncertain. It is also hard to say exactly how climate change is influencing tropical cyclones, beyond the fact that their impact is likely to be made worse by rising sea levels.
For much of 2017’s extreme weather, however, we can say that it is an indicator of what’s to come.
Links
- Why hot weather records continue to tumble worldwide
- Wildfires are raging in the Mediterranean. What can we learn?
- Climate change played a role in Australia’s hottest October and Tasmania’s big dry in 2015
- World set for hottest year on record: World Meteorological Organization
- 2015’s record-breaking temperatures will be normal by 2030 - it’s time to adapt
- Current emissions could already warm world to dangerous levels: study
- An open letter to the Prime Minister on the climate crisis, from 154 scientists
- State of the Climate 2015: global warming and El Niño sent records tumbling
- How a single word sparked a four-year saga of climate fact-checking and blog backlash
- Australia simmers through hottest autumn on record
- 2016 is likely to be the world’s hottest year: here’s why
- This summer’s sea temperatures were the hottest on record for Australia: here’s why
- February’s global temperature spike is a wake-up call
- We traced the human fingerprint on record-breaking temperatures back to the 1930s
- Sydney, so hot right now: what’s behind the city’s record run of warm weather?
- The weather bureau might be underestimating Australian warming: here’s why
- It’s official: 2015 was the hottest year ever recorded
- 2015 to be hottest year ever: World Meteorological Organization
- It’s been Australia’s hottest ever October, and that’s no coincidence
- England’s set to swelter through a rash of record hot years
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