Thursday, January 12, 2023

Not unexpected, but bad news nonetheless

As noted in The Guardian:

The world’s oceans were the hottest ever recorded in 2022, demonstrating the profound and pervasive changes that human-caused emissions have made to the planet’s climate.

More than 90% of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gas emissions is absorbed in the oceans. The records, starting in 1958, show an inexorable rise in ocean temperature, with an acceleration in warming after 1990....

Prof John Abraham, at the University of St Thomas in Minnesota and part of the study team, said: “If you want to measure global warming, you want to measure where the warming goes, and over 90% goes into the oceans.

“Measuring the oceans is the most accurate way of determining how out of balance our planet is.

“We are getting more extreme weather because of the warming oceans and that has tremendous consequences all around the world.”

Prof Michael Mann, at the University of Pennsylvania, also part of the team, said: “Warmer oceans mean there is more potential for bigger precipitation events, like we’ve seen this past year in Europe, Australia, and currently on the west coast of the US.” He said the analysis showed an ever-deeper layer of warm water on the ocean surface: “This leads to greater and more rapid intensification of hurricanes – something we’ve also seen this past year – since the winds no longer churn up cold sub-surface water that would otherwise dampen intensification.”


 

 

2 comments:

Not Trampis said...

not unexpected but deniers continue to deny

Steve said...

I know, it's ridiculous, isn't it?

A couple of weeks ago I was at the dog park, chatting to one guy I knew, and another guy who I hadn't met before. The new guy bought up something about "they say [somewhere in US, I think] is having the hottest day for 60 years, and I think 'well if it was hotter 60 years ago, is there really much to this global warming'. I'm not sure its real."

I sort of bit my tongue and just said "oh, it's real", but didn't really know how to address it further without getting a bit angry sounding.

Whenever you get a cooler than usual season, like we've had, a bunch of people are going to think this way. How they are responded to problematic.