As a warming Earth simmered into worrisome new territory this week, scientists said the unofficial records being set for average planetary temperature were a clear sign of how pollutants released by humans are warming their environment. But the heat is also just one way the planet is telling us something
Global heat is just the latest 2023 extreme that shows an Earth in crisis
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Smoke billows from the Donnie Creek wildfire in British Columbia, Canada. Photo / AP
Some other recent “firsts” and events that indicate climate change has entered uncharted territory:
Ocean Warming
Most of the planet is covered by oceans, which have absorbed 90 per cent of the recent warming caused by planet-warming gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. In April, global ocean temperature soared to 21.1 C, which was attributed to the combination of greenhouse gas emissions and the early El Nino formation. Newly published data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service documented “exceptionally warm” ocean temperatures in the North Atlantic with “extreme” marine heat waves near Ireland, the UK, and in the Baltic Sea.
Wildfire smoke
Several rounds of wildfire smoke originating from northern Canada brought dangerous air quality levels to eastern North America. The high levels of wildfire smoke have become familiar on the West Coast, but scientists say that climate change will make wildfires and smoke more likely and intense and that the East Coast will see more of it.
El Nino arrives early
The current El Nino — a period of warming Pacific Ocean waters — formed a month or two earlier than usual, replacing a La Nina that, with its cooling of Pacific waters, served as a damper on global temperatures. That means it will have more time than usual to strengthen. The World Meteorological Organisation predicts there is a 98 per cent chance that at least one of the next five years will be the warmest on record, beating 2016 when an exceptionally strong El Nino was present.
Shrinking Antarctic sea ice
Scientists are watching Antarctic sea ice shrink to record lows. The 11.7 million square kilometres covered by the sheet on June 27 was almost 2.6 million square kilometres less than average for that date for the period from 1981-2010, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Centre.
Put another way, an area nearly four times the size of Texas was gone from the ice sheet.