Thursday, 25th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Bodies warn nations over global warming

By Emmanuel Badejo
27 July 2015   |   12:25 am
THE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the American Meteorological Society has said that the world water body is by the day getting hotter, calling nations to rise to tame the trend. The hotness of the water body is connected with the Earth’s climate, which some have said is a threat to the world’s environment.…
PHOTO: Scienceblogs.com

PHOTO: Scienceblogs.com

THE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the American Meteorological Society has said that the world water body is by the day getting hotter, calling nations to rise to tame the trend.

The hotness of the water body is connected with the Earth’s climate, which some have said is a threat to the world’s environment.

According to an annual, detailed physical of Earth’s climate, U.S. scientists say the world is in increasingly hot and rising water.

The annual state of the climate report, released recently, delves into the details of already reported record-smashing warmth globally in 2014, giving special attention to the world’s oceans.

NOAA climate monitoring chief Deke Arndt, co-editor of the report, said the seas last year “were just ridiculous.”

The report said ocean surface temperatures were the warmest in 135 years of records, with the seas holding record levels of heat energy down to 2,300 feet below the surface. Sea level also hit modern highs, partly because warmer water expands.

About 93 percent of the man-made heat energy from the burning of fossil fuels went into the world’s oceans, said NOAA oceanographer Greg Johnson. And that heat energy trapped in the ocean affects all sorts of weather, including providing more fuel for tropical cyclones, said Tom Karl, director of NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.

All sorts of warming events shifted into overdrive, especially in the Pacific. In addition to a brewing El Nino – where weather worldwide is changed by warm water in parts of the central Pacific – there was a warming of the northeast Pacific nicknamed “The Blob” and a larger scale warming called the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, which often coincides with faster warming of the planet, Johnson said.

Johnson said subtropical fish not normally seen that far north were appearing off the coast of an unusually warm Alaska.

More than 400 scientists wrote the peer-reviewed 292-page study, the 25th year that the climate checkup was conducted. Its highlights include: four different measuring systems concluded that 2014 was hottest year on record on Earth’s surface. However, because of margins of error, there’s a chance it could only be second hottest.

0 Comments