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Showing Original Post only (View all)"I Study Climate Change. The Data Is Telling Us Something New." [View all]
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/13/opinion/climate-change-excessive-heat-2023.htmlNo paywall
https://archive.ph/BsOMP
Staggering. Unnerving. Mind-boggling. Absolutely gobsmackingly bananas.
As global temperatures shattered records and reached dangerous new highs over and over the past few months, my climate scientist colleagues and I have just about run out of adjectives to describe what we have seen. Data from Berkeley Earth released on Wednesday shows that September was an astounding 0.5 degree Celsius (almost a full degree Fahrenheit) hotter than the prior record, and July and August were around 0.3 degree Celsius (0.5 degree Fahrenheit) hotter. 2023 is almost certain to be the hottest year since reliable global records began in the mid-1800s and probably for the past 2,000 years (and well before that).
While natural weather patterns, including a growing El Niño event, are playing an important role, the record global temperatures we have experienced this year could not have occurred without the approximately 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming to date from human sources of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions. And while many experts have been cautious about acknowledging it, there is increasing evidence that global warming has accelerated over the past 15 years rather than continued at a gradual, steady pace. That acceleration means that the effects of climate change we are already seeing extreme heat waves, wildfires, rainfall and sea level rise will only grow more severe in the coming years.
I dont make this claim lightly. Among my colleagues in climate science, there are sharp divisions on this question, and some arent convinced its happening. Climate scientists generally focus on longer-term changes over decades rather than year-to-year variability, and some of my peers in the field have expressed concerns about overinterpreting short-term events like the extremes weve seen this year. In the past I doubted acceleration was happening, in part because of a long debate about whether global warming had paused from 1998 to 2012. In hindsight, that was clearly not the case. Im worried that if we dont pay attention today, well miss what are increasingly clear signals.
I wouldnt be making this argument if I didnt have strong evidence to back it up; the data were getting from three sources tells a worrying story about a world warming more quickly than before. First, the rate of warming weve measured over the worlds land and oceans over the past 15 years has been 40 percent higher than the rate since the 1970s, with the past nine years being the nine warmest years on record. Second, there has been acceleration over the past few decades in the total heat content of Earths oceans, where over 90 percent of the energy trapped by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is accumulating. Third, satellite measurements of Earths energy imbalance the difference between energy entering the atmosphere from the sun and the amount of heat leaving show a strong increase in the amount of heat trapped over the past two decades. If Earths energy imbalance is increasing over time, it should drive an increase in the worlds rate of warming.
*snip*
55 replies
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Well for centuries people have wondered how the world will end...now we know.
Jack-o-Lantern
Oct 2023
#14
The world will continue on it merry way, it will not end. We and much other life will end.
Magoo48
Oct 2023
#30
This is not solely on climate deniers. The first world would rather die than be inconvenienced.
Magoo48
Oct 2023
#32
Please expand on your thoughts. What preparations should we be doing to prepare?
Pepsidog
Oct 2023
#24
Should have listened to the scientists at the start of the disaster movie.
twodogsbarking
Oct 2023
#26
I'm glad I didn't have kids. The world is going to be a mess in 50 years. nt
Quixote1818
Oct 2023
#28
Texas A&M scientists predicted this would happen in 20-25 years. That was less than five years ago.
czarjak
Oct 2023
#31