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Last year was warmest ever that didn't feature an El Niño, report finds

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    Last year was warmest ever that didn't feature an El Niño, report finds

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/aug/01/state-of-the-climate-report-noaa-2017-third-warmest

    Last year was warmest ever that didn't feature an El Niño, report finds

    State of the climate report found 2017 was the third warmest with a record high sea level and destructive coral bleaching

    Oliver Milman in New York
    @olliemilman

    Wed 1 Aug 2018 17.08 BST
    Last modified on Thu 2 Aug 2018 01.05 BST

    Last year was the warmest ever recorded on Earth that didn’t feature an El Niño, a periodic climatic event that warms the Pacific Ocean, according to the annual state of the climate report by 500 climate scientists from around the world, overseen by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and released by the American Meteorological Society.

    Climate change cast a long shadow in 2017, with the planet experiencing soaring temperatures, retreating sea ice, a record high sea level, shrinking glaciers and the most destructive coral bleaching event on record.
    Number of hot days each year since 1950, relative to the 1961-1990 baseline.

    Overall, 2017 was third warmest year on record, Noaa said, behind 2016 and 2015. Countries including Spain, Bulgaria, Mexico and Argentina all broke their annual high temperature records.

    Puerto Madryn in Argentina reached 43.4C (110.12F), the warmest temperature ever recorded so far south in the world, while Turbat in Pakistan baked in 53.5C (128.3F), the global record temperature for May.

    Concentrations of planet-warming carbon dioxide continued on an upward march, reaching 405 parts per million in the atmosphere. This is 2.2ppm greater than 2016 and is the highest level discernible in modern records, as well as ice cores that show CO2 levels back as far as 800,000 years. The growth rate of CO2 has quadrupled since the early 1960s.

    The consequences of this heat, which follows a string of warm years, was felt around the world in 2017.
    Sign up to the Green Light email to get the planet's most important stories
    Read more

    In May of last year, ice extent in the Arctic reached its lowest maximum level in the 37-year satellite record, covering 8% less area than the long-term average. The Arctic experienced the sort of warmth that scientists say hasn’t been been present in the region for the last 2,000 years, with some regions 3 or 4 degrees Celsius hotter than an average recorded since 1982. Antarctic sea ice was also below average throughout 2017.

    Land-based ice mirrored these reversals, with the world’s glaciers losing mass for the 38th consecutive year on record. According to the report, the total ice loss since 1980 is the equivalent to slicing 22 metres off the top of the average glacier.

    Prolonged warmth in the seas helped spur a huge coral bleaching event, which is when coral reefs become stressed by high temperatures and expel their symbiotic algae. This causes them to whiten and, in some cases, die off.

    A three-year stretch to May 2017 was the “longest, most widespread and almost certainty most destructive” coral bleaching event on record, the report states, taking a notable toll on places such as the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Global average sea levels reached the highest level in the 25-year satellite record, 7.2cm (3in) above the 1993 average.

    “I find it quite stunning, really, how these record temperatures have affected ocean ecosystems,” said Gregory Johnson, an oceanographer at Noaa.
    Heatwave made more than twice as likely by climate change, scientists find
    Read more

    There were several major rainfall events in 2017 contributing to a wetter than normal year, with the Indian monsoon season claiming around 800 lives and devastating floods occurring in Venezuela and Nigeria. Global fire activity was at the lowest level since 2003, however.

    While exceptionally warm years could occur without human influence, the rapidly advancing field of climate change attribution science has made it clear the broad sweep of changes taking place on Earth would be virtually impossible without greenhouse gas emissions from human activity.

    The loss of glaciers and coral reefs threaten the food and water supplies of hundreds of millions of people, while heatwaves, flooding, wildfires and increasingly powerful storms are also a severe risk to human life.

    These dangers have been highlighted in stunning fashion this year, with a scorching global heatwave causing multiple deaths from Canada to Japan, while wildfires have caused further fatalties in places such as Greece and the western US.
    Last edited by chuckChuck; Aug 2, 2018, 08:05.

    #2
    The above article is based on the work of 500 scientists around the world, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and released by the American Meteorological Society.

    Comment


      #3
      Wattsupwiththat comments are great...

      This scam is just the greatest made for media and other attention seekers great ball of ‘moral’ fluff in living memory.

      The delicious irony is that most of the population of relatively developed societies are now so inured to media and mediocrity advertorial crap being shoved in their faces that it is all just water iff a ducks back.

      I take great reward though in the fact that this issue acts as an imbecileometer and reveals to us all just how dumb these galoots are.

      Comment


        #4
        Sounds like it’s the end of the world!
        Better tax us to save it.
        Christ same bullshit another day!

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
          https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/aug/01/state-of-the-climate-report-noaa-2017-third-warmest

          Last year was warmest ever that didn't feature an El Niño, report finds

          State of the climate report found 2017 was the third warmest with a record high sea level and destructive coral bleaching

          Oliver Milman in New York
          @olliemilman

          Wed 1 Aug 2018 17.08 BST
          Last modified on Thu 2 Aug 2018 01.05 BST

          Last year was the warmest ever recorded on Earth that didn’t feature an El Niño, a periodic climatic event that warms the Pacific Ocean, according to the annual state of the climate report by 500 climate scientists from around the world, overseen by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) and released by the American Meteorological Society.

          Climate change cast a long shadow in 2017, with the planet experiencing soaring temperatures, retreating sea ice, a record high sea level, shrinking glaciers and the most destructive coral bleaching event on record.
          Number of hot days each year since 1950, relative to the 1961-1990 baseline.

          Overall, 2017 was third warmest year on record, Noaa said, behind 2016 and 2015. Countries including Spain, Bulgaria, Mexico and Argentina all broke their annual high temperature records.

          Puerto Madryn in Argentina reached 43.4C (110.12F), the warmest temperature ever recorded so far south in the world, while Turbat in Pakistan baked in 53.5C (128.3F), the global record temperature for May.

          Concentrations of planet-warming carbon dioxide continued on an upward march, reaching 405 parts per million in the atmosphere. This is 2.2ppm greater than 2016 and is the highest level discernible in modern records, as well as ice cores that show CO2 levels back as far as 800,000 years. The growth rate of CO2 has quadrupled since the early 1960s.

          The consequences of this heat, which follows a string of warm years, was felt around the world in 2017.
          Sign up to the Green Light email to get the planet's most important stories
          Read more

          In May of last year, ice extent in the Arctic reached its lowest maximum level in the 37-year satellite record, covering 8% less area than the long-term average. The Arctic experienced the sort of warmth that scientists say hasn’t been been present in the region for the last 2,000 years, with some regions 3 or 4 degrees Celsius hotter than an average recorded since 1982. Antarctic sea ice was also below average throughout 2017.

          Land-based ice mirrored these reversals, with the world’s glaciers losing mass for the 38th consecutive year on record. According to the report, the total ice loss since 1980 is the equivalent to slicing 22 metres off the top of the average glacier.

          Prolonged warmth in the seas helped spur a huge coral bleaching event, which is when coral reefs become stressed by high temperatures and expel their symbiotic algae. This causes them to whiten and, in some cases, die off.

          A three-year stretch to May 2017 was the “longest, most widespread and almost certainty most destructive” coral bleaching event on record, the report states, taking a notable toll on places such as the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Global average sea levels reached the highest level in the 25-year satellite record, 7.2cm (3in) above the 1993 average.

          “I find it quite stunning, really, how these record temperatures have affected ocean ecosystems,” said Gregory Johnson, an oceanographer at Noaa.
          Heatwave made more than twice as likely by climate change, scientists find
          Read more

          There were several major rainfall events in 2017 contributing to a wetter than normal year, with the Indian monsoon season claiming around 800 lives and devastating floods occurring in Venezuela and Nigeria. Global fire activity was at the lowest level since 2003, however.

          While exceptionally warm years could occur without human influence, the rapidly advancing field of climate change attribution science has made it clear the broad sweep of changes taking place on Earth would be virtually impossible without greenhouse gas emissions from human activity.

          The loss of glaciers and coral reefs threaten the food and water supplies of hundreds of millions of people, while heatwaves, flooding, wildfires and increasingly powerful storms are also a severe risk to human life.

          These dangers have been highlighted in stunning fashion this year, with a scorching global heatwave causing multiple deaths from Canada to Japan, while wildfires have caused further fatalties in places such as Greece and the western US.
          Get your doomsday bunker complete with solar panels finished ASAP !!!!!!! Lol

          Comment


            #6
            It's real easy to just sit back and sling mud but not one of your responses contains any scientific response to counter the State of the climate report that is the source for this article.

            Third warmest year on record. Extreme heat and drought in much of of the northern hemisphere.

            But hey your farms are bulletproof when it comes to climate change and the increasing risk of extreme weather patterns.

            Don't worry about 50-70 % of a normal crop it will still pay all your bills correct?

            Comment


              #7
              It could be 5 million scientists making the claim but there's zero accountability if they are wrong. They can't predict next week yet. Just more govt employees spreading fear to collect a paycheck and a pension.

              Comment


                #8
                And some crops at 150% so overall still normal! Still too much food on earth...

                "fix the weather” That right there is the nub of the issue, far too many people believe humans can fix the weather. ."
                "People have been trying to “fix the weather” since throwing screaming virgins into volcano caldera was the order of the day. Same impulse, different day . . ."
                “After all, even NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies asserts that the Global Annual Mean Surface Air Temperature Change from 1880 to 2017 is only just over one degree Celsius despite a reputed 40% rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) content. And the impact of further CO2 rise diminishes as the concentration increases.” — According to IPCC global warming component [anthropogenic greenhouse effect]i s half of the global annual mean temperature; also the surface air temperature is positively biased."

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by fjlip View Post
                  And some crops at 150% so overall still normal! Still too much food on earth...

                  "fix the weather” That right there is the nub of the issue, far too many people believe humans can fix the weather. ."
                  "People have been trying to “fix the weather” since throwing screaming virgins into volcano caldera was the order of the day. Same impulse, different day . . ."
                  “After all, even NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies asserts that the Global Annual Mean Surface Air Temperature Change from 1880 to 2017 is only just over one degree Celsius despite a reputed 40% rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) content. And the impact of further CO2 rise diminishes as the concentration increases.” — According to IPCC global warming component [anthropogenic greenhouse effect]i s half of the global annual mean temperature; also the surface air temperature is positively biased."
                  Arctic temperatures have risen much higher than 1 degree. This means that the differential between the arctic and the mid latitudes is less which impacts how the jet stream functions. scientists are already saying that this is giving us stagnant weather patterns. Longer droughts longer floods depending where the jet stream pattern stalls. But don't worry you are bullet proof and weather patterns don't matter.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    In saskatxhewan We should have spent another billion on carbon sequestration because we don't believe carbon is causing any damage to climate?? Hahahaha wow

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Thanks forposting our daily dose of good news Chuck. It is reassuring that some still has such a positive attitude in spite of the constant doomsday news being pitched at us.

                      In other good news, 2017 set another new record for food production worldwide, thanks in no small part to the increased temperatures, increased CO2, and increasingly benevolent climate. Your cut and paste only reinforces that good news story.

                      Can you please return to posting the catastrophic results (if you can find some) instead, good news is not allowed on Angryville.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                        It's real easy to just sit back and sling mud but not one of your responses contains any scientific response to counter the State of the climate report that is the source for this article.

                        Third warmest year on record. Extreme heat and drought in much of of the northern hemisphere.

                        But hey your farms are bulletproof when it comes to climate change and the increasing risk of extreme weather patterns.

                        Don't worry about 50-70 % of a normal crop it will still pay all your bills correct?
                        Strange conclusion to reach if you think this reflects on "climate".

                        Because when it stays abnormally cold for a season or a year, then it's just "weather"...

                        With your repeated and enthusiastic cries about saving the planet from man-made (including chucky!) climate change,I again need to ask, how are your solar installations coming along?

                        Surely the utter urgency of the threat that looms large over us will compel you to take immediate action, rather than waiting for a better economic entry point/opportunity.

                        Cuz waiting would make you just another evil capitalist.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                          It's real easy to just sit back and sling mud but not one of your responses contains any scientific response to counter the State of the climate report that is the source for this article.

                          Third warmest year on record. Extreme heat and drought in much of of the northern hemisphere.

                          But hey your farms are bulletproof when it comes to climate change and the increasing risk of extreme weather patterns.

                          Don't worry about 50-70 % of a normal crop it will still pay all your bills correct?
                          please provide one single peer reviewed study that proves the earth is round, that gravity attracts, and water is wet and stupid is infinite...lol

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by tmyrfield View Post
                            please provide one single peer reviewed study that proves the earth is round, that gravity attracts, and water is wet and stupid is infinite...lol
                            Or at least find an acceptable excuse as to why life on earth keeps improving by ALL measures, including food production, as listed above, in spite of the catastrophic global warming we are enduring. Cricket yet again.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Did somebody ask for PEER REVIEW?

                              http://notrickszone.com/#sthash.1sMsWc0V.dpbs

                              Enjoy C2.

                              Comment

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