2010 Hits Top of Temperature Chart
Jan 25, 2011 - Alexandra Giese
- Earth Policy Institute
Topping off the warmest decade in
history, 2010 experienced a global average temperature
of 14.63 degrees Celsius (58.3 degrees Fahrenheit),
tying 2005 as the hottest year in 131 years of recordkeeping.
This news will come as no surprise to residents
of the 19 countries that experienced record heat
in 2010. Belarus set a record of 38.7 degrees Celsius
(101.7 degrees Fahrenheit) on August 6 and then broke
it by 0.2 degrees Celsius just one day later. A 47.2-degree
Celsius (117.0-degree Fahrenheit) spike in Burma
set a record for Southeast Asia as a whole. And on
May 26, 2010, the ancient city of Mohenjo-daro in
Pakistan hit 53.5 degrees Celsius (128.3 degrees
Fahrenheit)—a record not only for the country
but for all of Asia. In fact, it was the fourth hottest
temperature ever recorded anywhere.
The earth’s temperature is not only rising,
it is rising at an increasing rate. From 1880 through
1970, the global average temperature increased roughly
0.03 degrees Celsius each decade. Since 1970, that
pace has increased dramatically, to 0.13 degrees
Celsius per decade. Two thirds of the increase of
nearly 0.8 degrees Celsius (1.4 degrees Fahrenheit)
in the global temperature since the 1880s has occurred
in the last 40 years. And 9 of the 10 warmest years
happened in the last decade.
Global temperature is influenced by a number of
factors, some natural and some due to human activities.
A phenomenon known as the El Niño-Southern
Oscillation is characterized by extremes in Pacific
Ocean temperatures and shifts in atmospheric patterns.
The cycle involves opposite phases, both of which
have global impacts. The El Niño phase typically
raises the global average temperature, while its
counterpart, La Niña, tends to depress it.
Temperature variations are also partly determined
by solar cycles. Because we are close to a minimum
in solar irradiance (how much energy the earth receives
from the sun) and entered a La Niña episode
in the second half of 2010, we would expect a cooler
year than normal—making 2010’s record
temperature even more remarkable.
Since the Industrial Revolution, emissions from
human activities of greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide have driven the earth’s climate system
dangerously outside of its normal range. Carbon dioxide
levels in the atmosphere have risen nearly 40 percent,
from 280 parts per million (ppm) to almost 390 ppm.
As the atmosphere becomes increasingly overloaded
with heat-trapping gases, the earth’s temperature
continues to rise.
Even seemingly small changes in global temperature
have far-reaching effects on sea level, atmospheric
circulation, and weather patterns around the globe.
Climate scientists note that increases in both the
frequency and severity of extreme weather events
are characteristics of a hotter climate. In 2010,
the heat wave in Russia, fires in Israel, flooding
in Pakistan and Australia, landslides in China, record
snowfall across the mid-Atlantic region of the United
States, and 12 Atlantic Ocean hurricanes were among
the extreme weather events. The human cost of these
events was not small: the Russian heat wave and forest
fires claimed 56,000 lives, while the Pakistan floods
took 1,760.
Although the weather of 2010 seems extreme compared
with that of earlier years, scientists warn that
such patterns could become more common in the near
future. And while no single event can be attributed
directly to climate change, NASA climate scientist
James Hansen notes that the extreme weather of 2010
would “almost certainly not” have occurred
in the absence of excessive greenhouse gas emissions.
Warmer air holds more water vapor, and that extra
moisture leads to heavier storms. At the same time
that precipitation events are becoming larger in
some areas, climate change causes more intense and
prolonged droughts in others. By some estimates,
droughts could be up to 10 times as severe by the
end of the century.
Like a growing number of extreme weather events,
an increase in the number of record-high temperatures—and
a concomitant decrease in the number of record lows—is
characteristic of a warming world. For instance,
while 19 countries recorded record highs in 2010,
not one witnessed a record low temperature. Across
the United States, weather station data reveal that
daily maximum temperature records outnumbered minimum
temperature records for nine months of 2010. Over
the last decade, record highs were more than twice
as common as record lows, whereas half a century
ago there was a roughly equal probability of experiencing
either of these.
Temperatures are rising faster in some places than
in others. The Arctic has warmed by as much as 3–4
degrees Celsius (5–7 degrees Fahrenheit) since
the 1950s. It is heating up at twice the rate of
the earth on average, making it the fastest-warming
region on the planet. Disproportionately large warming
in the Arctic is partially due to the albedo effect.
As sea ice melts, darker ocean water is exposed;
the additional energy absorbed by the darker surface
then melts more ice, setting in motion a self-reinforcing
feedback.
In 2010, Arctic sea ice shrank to its third-lowest
extent on record, after 2007 and 2008, and also
reached what was likely its lowest volume in thousands
of years. At both poles, the great ice sheets are
showing worrying signs: recent calculations reveal
that Greenland is losing more than 250 billion
tons of water per year, and 87 percent of marine
glaciers on the Antarctic Peninsula have retreated
since the 1940s. There is enough water frozen in
Greenland and Antarctica to raise global sea levels
by over 70 meters (230 feet) if they were to melt
entirely.
Unless global temperatures are stabilized, higher
seas from melting ice sheets and mountain glaciers,
combined with the heat-driven expansion of ocean
water itself, will eventually lead to the displacement
of millions of people as low-lying coastal areas
and island nations are inundated. Sea level rise
has been minimal so far, with a global average of
17 centimeters (6 inches) during the last century.
But the rate of the rise is accelerating, and some
scientists maintain that a rise as high as 2 meters
(6 feet) is possible before this century’s
end.
It is not only coastal populations that are threatened
by rising global temperatures. Higher temperatures
reduce crop yields and water supplies, affecting
food security worldwide. Agricultural scientists
have drawn a correlation between a temperature rise
of 1 degree Celsius above the optimum during the
growing season and a grain yield decrease of 10 percent.
Heat waves and droughts can also cause drastic cuts
in harvests. Mountain glaciers, which are shrinking
worldwide as a result of rising temperatures, supply
drinking and irrigation water to much of the world’s
population, including hundreds of millions in Asia.
More than any natural variations, carbon emissions
from human activities will determine the future trajectory
of the earth’s temperature and thus the frequency
of extreme weather events, the rise in sea level,
and the state of food security. The 2007 report from
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projected
that the earth would warm 1.1–6.4 degrees Celsius
(2–11 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the
century. Yet a rise of 2–3 degrees Celsius
will make the earth as hot as it was 3 million years
ago, when oceans were more than 25 meters (80 feet)
higher than they are today. Subsequent research has
projected an even larger rise—up to 7.4 degrees
Celsius–-if the world continues to depend on
a fossil-fuel-based energy system. But we can create
a different future by turning to a new path—one
with carbon-free energy sources, restructured transportation,
and increased efficiency. By dramatically reducing
emissions, we could halt the rapid rise of the earth’s
temperature.
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