It’s all but certain that 2015 will end up as the hottest year on record. And in setting that mark, the world is on track to finish the year 1°C above pre-industrial levels, a dubious milestone.
That would make 2015 the first year to crack the halfway mark of 2°C
warming, the benchmark that’s been targeted as “safe” climate change and
what nations are working toward meeting ahead of climate talks in Paris in December. But Monday’s announcement by the U.K. Met Office hints at how difficult achieving that target will be.
Global temperature data for September 2015.
Credit: U.K. Met Office
Unlike carbon dioxide, which has risen steadily like a drumbeat every
year since the Industrial Revolution due to human activities, the
temperature is likely to fluctuate annually and could dip slightly in
the coming years (though signs already point to 2016
being even hotter). But the 1°C of warming shows how humans are
reshaping the climate in the here and now and not some distant future.
The Met Office maintains one of the four major global temperature records.
It shows that through September, the planet is running 1.8°F (1.02°C)
above normal. El Niño, the warming of waters in the eastern tropical
Pacific, is a contributing factor. But it’s being layered on top of a
long-term climate change signal, which has seen the world get hotter and
hotter since record keeping began in the late 1800s.
“We've had similar natural events in the past, yet this is
the first time we're set to reach the 1°C marker and it's clear that it
is human influence driving our modern climate into uncharted territory,"
Stephen Belcher, the director of the Met Office Hadley Center, said in a
statement.
In a separate announcement on Monday, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
announced that greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere have
reached record highs. That includes global carbon dioxide reaching 400 parts per million (ppm) for the first time earlier this year at 40 carbon dioxide-monitoring stations.
Carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere are the
main drivers of climate change. The world has seen carbon dioxide risen
more than 120 ppm since pre-industrial times. Readings at some stations,
including the gold standard at Mauna Loa Observatory, are set to pass 400 ppm for the foreseeable future later this year. The WMO expects the global average to pass 400 ppm in 2016 as well.
An animation showing how carbon dioxide moves around the planet.
Credit: NASA/YouTube
With the planet having already run through two-thirds of its carbon budget
— the amount of carbon that can be emitted before the world warms 2°C
— scientists say that more action is needed to avoid the worst impacts
of climate change.
Even if the world limits warming to 2°C, there are still wholesale changes in store for the planet.
Research released
by Climate Central on Sunday shows that even if warming is capped at
2°C, sea level rise would still impact land that’s currently home to at
least 130 million people. If warming reaches 7.2°F (4°C) above
pre-industrial levels, land where 470 million to 760 million people live
today would feel the impacts.
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