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Record temperatures spark fresh concern for Antarctic ice
By St�phane ORJOLLET
Paris (AFP) Feb 21, 2020

NOAA: January 2020 was hottest on record
Washington DC (UPI) Feb 14, 2020 - Last month was the hottest January in all 141 years of climate records, according to scientists at the National Centers for Environmental Information.

In a Thursday press release, the NOAA said January 2020 also marked the 44th consecutive January and the 421st consecutive month with temperatures above the 20th-century average.

On top of that, the scientists said the four warmest Januaries have occurred since 2016 with the 10 warmest occurring in the last 20 years.

Globally, land and ocean surface temperatures were at a record 2.05 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th-century average, surpassing the previous January record set in 2016 by 0.04 of a degree F.

By hemisphere, the world's northern half established a record January with a 2.70 degrees F above average while the southern half produced its second-warmest January with 1.40 degrees F above average, falling short of its 2016 record.

Meanwhile, Scandinavia, Asia, the Indian Ocean, the central and western Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean and Central and South America all experienced record-warm temperatures in January, the NOAA said.

The national environment center added that arctic sea ice coverage was also observed to be 5.3 percent below the average of 2018-2010, tying the eighth least amount of ice coverage recorded in the past 42 years.

For the United States specifically, it was the fifth warmest January on record for the lower 48 states, and while it wasn't a record-breaking month, the heat was widespread, according to the NOAA's website.

"This kind of nation-wide warmth in January isn't unique, but it's rare," the NOAA said. "In the past 20 years, it's only happened two other times, in 2006 and 2012."

Of the lower 48, Utah and southern Colorado were cooler than average as was Alaska, it said.

Over the past 30 years, however, only five times has the United States' coldest month of the year been colder than the 20th-century average.

"Averaged over the entire historical record (1895-2020), January temperature has increased by 0.2 degrees F per decade, but in reality, virtually all of that change has come in the past 30 years," the NOAA said. "The January warming trend since 1991 has been nearly triple the longer-term rate."

As Antarctica became the latest place on Earth to smash its high temperature record, new studies are alerting humanity to the risks of continuing to warm the continent that is home to enough frozen water to lift global sea levels dozens of metres.

On February 9, a team of researchers on Seymour Island, part of an archipelago curving off the northern tip of Antarctica, measured 20.75 degrees Celsius (69.35 Farenheit), the first time anywhere on the continent had broken the 20-C barrier.

"We'd never seen a temperature this high in Antarctica," Brazilian scientist Carlos Schaefer told AFP.

That record came hot on the heels of an already alarming temperature peak, with the mercury hitting 18.3C at the Argentinian Esperanza research base on February 7.

"We can't use this to anticipate climatic changes in the future. It's a data point," said Schaefer.

"It's simply a signal that something different is happening in that area."

While it can be tricky to definitively link climate change to individual weather events there is little doubt that such high temperatures aren't good news for Antarctica.

And they fit a long-term trend of global warming.

The last decade was the hottest in recorded history, and the last five years have been the five hottest on record.

January 2020 was the hottest January scientists had ever witnessed, and Earth's poles are warming quicker than much of the rest of the planet.

Two studies this week sounded the alarm on what rising land and sea temperatures could mean for the continent's vast ice sheets.

One published Friday in the Earth System Dynamics review found that Antarctic melting could raise sea levels up to 58 centimetres by the end of this century -- constituting a trebling of last century's pace.

"The 'Antarctica Factor' turns out to be the greatest risk, and also the greatest uncertainty, for sea-levels around the globe," said lead-author Anders Levermann from the Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact Research.

The team behind the study said that rapid cuts to greenhouse emissions in line with the Paris Agreement on climate change could help limit the ice-sheet loss.

But with emissions creeping higher every year, the world is likely to have to grapple with significant disruption to coastal communities by 2100.

"What we know for certain is that not stopping the burning of coal, oil and gas will drive up the risks for coastal metropolises from New York to Mumbai, Hamburg or Shanghai," said Levermann.

- Previous melting -

A second study by Australian researchers published Wednesday in the PNAS journal, looked into the deep past to predict future sea-level rises.

They studied the last of Earth's interglacial periods, between 129,000 and 116,000 years ago.

Measuring isotopes from volcanic ash in ice samples, the team identified a gap in the ice sheet record that indicated mass sea-level rise as temperatures warmed.

At the time, Earth's oceans were roughly 2C hotter than currently, and the team estimated the effect that had on Antarctica's vast western ice sheet.

The sheet rests on the sea bed and so is extremely vulnerable to temperature rises.

"The melting was likely caused by less than 2�C ocean warming -- and that's something that has major implications for the future, given the ocean temperature increase and West Antarctic melting that's happening today," said Chris Turney, professor in Earth and Climate Science at UNSW Sydney and lead author of the study.

The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says that melting ice sheets have already contributed 15 centimetres to sea levels since the start of the 20th Century.

As a consequence, by mid-century more than one billion people will live in areas particularly vulnerable to storm surges made worse by higher seas.


Related Links
Beyond the Ice Age


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ICE WORLD
Antarctica registers record temperature of over 20 C
Sao Paulo (AFP) Feb 13, 2020
Scientists in Antarctica have recorded a new record temperature of 20.75 degrees Celsius (69.35 Fahrenheit), breaking the barrier of 20 degrees for the first time on the continent, a researcher said Thursday. "We'd never seen a temperature this high in Antarctica," Brazilian scientist Carlos Schaefer told AFP. He cautioned that the reading, taken at a monitoring station on an island off the continent's northern tip on February 9, "has no meaning in terms of a climate-change trend," because it is ... read more

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