Current:Home > MyEthermac|2020 Ties 2016 as Earth’s Hottest Year on Record, Even Without El Niño to Supercharge It -GrowthInsight
Ethermac|2020 Ties 2016 as Earth’s Hottest Year on Record, Even Without El Niño to Supercharge It
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-10 18:40:39
European climate scientists have Ethermactallied up millions of temperature readings from last year to conclude that 2020 was tied with 2016 as the hottest year on record for the planet.
It’s the first time the global temperature has peaked without El Niño, a cyclical Pacific Ocean warm phase that typically spikes the average annual global temperature to new highs, said Freja Vamborg, a senior scientist with the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, who was lead author on its annual report for 2020.
That report shows the Earth’s surface temperature at 2.25 degrees Fahrenheit above the 1850 to 1890 pre-industrial average, and 1.8 degrees warmer than the 1981 to 2010 average that serves as a baseline against which annual temperature variations are measured.
In the past, the climate-warming effect of El Niño phases really stood out in the long-term record, Vamberg said. The 1998 “super” El Niño caused the largest annual increase in global temperatures recorded up to that time, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
“If you look at the 1998 El Niño, it was really a spike, but now, we’re kind of well above that, simply due to the trend,” Vamberg said.
El Niño can warm the planet’s annual average temperature by about 0.15 degrees Celsius, so the global temperature could spike to yet another new record next time the central equatorial Pacific swings to that warm phase, said Jennifer Francis, a scientist with the Woodwell Climate Research Center in Massachusetts.
Part of 2020’s record heat can be attributed to persistent warmth in the Arctic and northern Siberia, where the annual temperature was 10.8 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than average for the year, Vamberg said.
Europe recorded its warmest year on record: 0.72 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than 2019 and 2.9 degrees warmer than the 1981 to 2010 baseline. Autumn was especially hot on the continent, running 4 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than the baseline for the first time ever.
The last six years were the six hottest recorded on the planet, and 2020 closed the warmest decade on record.
In the records of the Japanese Meteorological Agency, which released its annual report last week, 2020 beat out 2016 as the planet’s warmest year, running 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th century average. It was the fifth-warmest year on record for the U.S., according to the 2020 U.S. national climate summary released by NOAA on January 8. Its annual global climate report and other major climate studies are due in the next week or so, including those from NASA and the United Kingdom Meteorological Office. Their results are expected to be within a tenth of a degree of each other.
Each of the agencies uses the same general set of temperature readings from thousands of weather stations spread across continents and oceans, but they sometimes reach slightly different results, because they calculate the data in different ways. That’s especially true with data from polar regions, where readings are sparse.
The final numbers rarely differ by more than a few hundredths of a degree, but in a year in which the results are very close to previous readings, that can affect the ranking. Once all the figures are out, the United Nations World Meteorological Organization compiles them and releases an annual report that includes the closest thing to an official global temperature measurement. The WMO should release its report later this month.
The small differences don’t call any of the measurements into question, Vamberg said. When taken together, especially over a period of five or 10 years, they reinforce each other and show the inexorable, long-term warming trend caused by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, she said.
“I wouldn’t make a call saying one is better or different,” added Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, head of climate science with Climate Analytics and Humboldt University in Berlin. “They just reflect different ways of constructing a temperature record.”
Last year’s record or near-record reading was widely expected and forecast for months, due to a steady string of monthly records.
“What we are seeing is pretty much in line with our expectations,” he said. “If it was an El Niño year, we would expect an additional spike on top of human-made climate change.” In comparing years on a short timescale, he added, natural annual variations can still override the signal of human-caused warming.
“An individual record year is not the core message of climate science,” Schleussner said. “It will continue warming until CO2 emissions meet net zero. Any individual year record is a reminder we are still increasing the level of greenhouse gases, which means Earth will keep getting hotter.”
The dramatic impacts of 2020’s record warmth were also not unexpected. Blistering heat waves on every continent, a hyperactive Atlantic hurricane season and wildfires that raged from Australia to the Arctic have all been attributed to global warming by peer-reviewed research.
The various global annual temperature compilations help clarify the picture of a warming planet, said Kevin Trenberth, a climate scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder and the University of Auckland, New Zealand.
“The consequences are clear,” Trenberth said. “More heatwaves, including marine heat waves, stronger, bigger, longer lasting hurricanes, heavier rainfalls and snowfalls and stronger droughts and wildfires.”
veryGood! (11)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- House poised to pass bill that could ban TikTok but it faces uncertain path in the Senate
- Mass kidnappings from Nigeria schools show the state does not have control, one expert says
- Staff at a Virginia wildlife center pretend to be red foxes as they care for an orphaned kit
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Jelly Roll, Kelsea Ballerini, Lainey Wilson, Megan Moroney, Cody Johnson lead CMT Music Awards noms
- Former UFC champion Mark Coleman in the hospital after saving his parents from a house fire in Ohio
- Neve Campbell is returning for 'Scream 7' after pay dispute, Melissa Barrera firing
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Paul Alexander, Texas man who lived most of his life in an iron lung, dies at 78
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Chiefs opening up salary cap space by restructuring Patrick Mahomes' contract, per report
- Who was John Barnett? What to know about the Boeing employee and his safety concerns
- See the Extravagant Gift Patrick Mahomes Gave Brittany Mahomes for Second Wedding Anniversary
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Travis Kelce Details “Unique” Singapore Reunion With Taylor Swift
- Miami Seaquarium says it will fight the eviction, protestors may have to wait to celebrate
- Mega Millions Winning numbers for March 12 drawing, with $735 million jackpot
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Returns from Tommy John surgery may seem routine. Recovery can be full of grief, angst and isolation
Another suspect arrested in shooting that wounded 8 high school students at Philadelphia bus stop
Hair Products That Work While You Sleep: Go From Bedhead to Bombshell With Minimal Effort
Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
Former UFC champion Mark Coleman in the hospital after saving his parents from a house fire in Ohio
Portion of US adults identifying as LGBTQ has more than doubled in last 12 years
House poised to pass bill that could ban TikTok but it faces uncertain path in the Senate