Extract from The
Guardian
Records of temperature
that go back far further than 1800s suggest warming of recent decades
is out of step with any period over the past millennium
The sun sets beyond
visitors to Liberty Memorial as the temperature hovers around 100F in
Kansas City, Missouri, last month. Photograph: Charlie Riedel/AP
Tuesday
30 August 2016 20.00 AEST
The
planet is warming at a pace not experienced within the past 1,000
years, at least, making it “very unlikely” that the world will
stay within a crucial temperature limit agreed by nations just last
year, according to Nasa’s top climate scientist.
This
year has already seen scorching heat around the world, with the
average global temperature peaking
at 1.38C above levels experienced in the 19th century,
perilously close to the 1.5C limit agreed in the landmark Paris
climate accord. July was
the warmest month since modern record keeping began in 1880,
with each month since October 2015 setting a new high mark for heat.
But Nasa said
that records of temperature that go back far further, taken via
analysis of ice cores and sediments, suggest that the warming of
recent decades is out of step with any period over the past
millennium.
Proxy-based
temperature reconstruction. Photograph: Nasa Earth Observatory
“In
the last 30 years we’ve really moved into exceptional territory,”
Gavin Schmidt, director of Nasa’s Goddard
Institute for Space Studies, said. “It’s unprecedented in
1,000 years. There’s no period that has the trend seen in the 20th
century in terms of the inclination (of temperatures).”“Maintaining
temperatures below the 1.5C guardrail requires significant and very
rapid cuts in carbon dioxide emissions or co-ordinated
geo-engineering. That is very unlikely. We are not even yet making
emissions cuts commensurate with keeping warming below 2C.”Schmidt
repeated his previous prediction that there is a
99% chance that 2016 will be the warmest year on record,
with around 20% of the heat attributed to a strong El Niño climatic
event. Last year is currently the warmest year on record, itself
beating a landmark set in 2014.“It’s the long-term trend we have
to worry about though and there’s no evidence it’s going away and
lots of reasons to think it’s here to stay,” Schmidt said.
“There’s
no pause or hiatus in temperature increase. People who think this is
over are viewing the world through rose-tinted spectacles. This is a
chronic problem for society for the next 100 years.”Schmidt is the
highest-profile scientist to
effectively write-off the 1.5C target, which was adopted at
December’s UN summit after heavy lobbying from island nations that
risk being inundated by rising seas if temperatures exceed this
level. Recent research
found that just five more years of carbon dioxide emissions
at current levels will virtually wipe out any chance of restraining
temperatures to a 1.5C increase and avoid runaway climate change.
Temperature reconstructions
by Nasa, using work from its sister agency the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, found that the global temperature
typically rose by between 4-7C over a period of 5,000 years as the
world moved out of ice ages. The temperature rise clocked up over the
past century is around 10 times faster than this previous rate of
warming.The increasing pace of warming means that the world will heat
up at a rate “at least” 20 times faster than the historical
average over the coming 100 years, according to Nasa.
The
comparison of recent temperatures to the paleoclimate isn’t exact,
as it matches modern record-keeping to proxies taken from ancient
layers of glacier ice, ocean sediments and rock.Scientists are able
to gauge greenhouse gas levels stretching back more than 800,000
years but the certainty around the composition of previous climates
is stronger within the past 1,000 years. While it’s still difficult
to compare a single year to another prior to the 19th century, a Nasa
reconstruction shows that the pace of temperature increase over
recent decades outstrips anything that has occurred since the year
500.Lingering carbon dioxide already emitted from power generation,
transport and agriculture is already likely to raise sea levels by
around three feet by the end of the century, and potentially
by 70 feet in the centuries to come. Increasing temperatures
will shrink the polar ice caps, make large areas of the Middle East
and North Africa unbearable to live in and accelerate what’s known
as Earth’s “sixth
mass extinction” of animal species.
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