WASHINGTON (AP) — Get ready for
several years of even more record-breaking heat that pushes Earth to more
deadly, fiery and uncomfortable extremes, two of the world’s top weather
agencies forecast.
There’s an 80% chance the world
will break another annual temperature record in the next five years, and it’s
even more probable that the world will again exceed the international
temperature threshold set 10 years ago, according to a five-year forecast released
Wednesday by the World Meteorological Organization and the U.K. Meteorological
Office.
“Higher global mean temperatures
may sound abstract, but it translates in real life to a higher chance of
extreme weather: stronger hurricanes, stronger precipitation, droughts,” said
Cornell University climate scientist Natalie Mahowald, who wasn’t part of the
calculations but said they made sense. “So higher global mean temperatures
translate to more lives lost.”
With every tenth of a degree the
world warms from human-caused climate change “we will experience higher
frequency and more extreme events (particularly heat waves but also droughts,
floods, fires and human-reinforced hurricanes/typhoons),” emailed Johan
Rockstrom, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in
Germany. He was not part of the research.
And for the first time there’s a
chance — albeit slight — that before the end of the decade, the world’s annual
temperature will shoot past the Paris climate accord goal of limiting warming
to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) and hit a more alarming 2
degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) of heating since the mid-1800s, the
two agencies said.
There’s an 86% chance that one
of the next five years will pass 1.5 degrees and a 70% chance that the five
years as a whole will average more than that global milestone, they figured.
The projections come from more
than 200 forecasts using computer simulations run by 10 global centers of
scientists.
Ten years ago, the same teams
figured there was a similar remote chance — about 1% — that one of the upcoming
years would exceed that critical 1.5-degree threshold and then it happened last
year. This year, a 2-degree Celsius above pre-industrial year enters the
equation in a similar manner, something UK Met Office longer term predictions
chief Adam Scaife and science scientist Leon Hermanson called “shocking.”
“It’s not something anyone wants
to see, but that’s what the science is telling us,” Hermanson said. Two degrees
of warming is the secondary threshold, the one considered less likely to break,
set by the 2015 Paris agreement.
Technically, even though 2024
was 1.5 degrees Celsius warmer than pre-industrial times, the Paris climate
agreement’s threshold is for a 20-year time period, so it has not been
exceeded. Factoring in the past 10 years and forecasting the next 10 years, the
world is now probably about 1.4 degrees Celsius (2.5 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter
since the mid 1800s, World Meteorological Organization climate services
director Chris Hewitt estimated.
“With the next five years
forecast to be more than 1.5C warmer than preindustrial levels on average, this
will put more people than ever at risk of severe heat waves, bringing more
deaths and severe health impacts unless people can be better protected from the
effects of heat. Also, we can expect more severe wildfires as the hotter
atmosphere dries out the landscape,” said Richard Betts, head of climate
impacts research at the UK Met Office and a professor at the University of
Exeter.
Ice in the Arctic — which will
continue to warm 3.5 times faster than the rest of the world — will melt and
seas will rise faster, Hewitt said.
What tends to happen is that
global temperatures rise like riding on an escalator, with temporary and
natural El Nino weather cycles acting like jumps up or down on that escalator,
scientists said. But lately, after each jump from an El Nino, which adds warming
to the globe, the planet doesn’t go back down much, if at all.
“Record temperatures immediately
become the new normal,” said Stanford University climate scientist Rob Jackson.
-PBS
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