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The climate: ‘A more formidable crisis looms in the background’

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Covering Climate Now

 

This story originally appeared on Mashable and is republished here as part of livehealthy.ae’s participation in Covering Climate Now, a global journalistic collaboration to strengthen coverage of the climate story. It kicks off a week of coverage of the climate crisis. 

 

 

After Earth experienced its second-hottest year in 140 years of record-keeping in 2019, the first few months of 2020 have either broken historic monthly records, or come close to doing so. January 2020 was the warmest January on record. February 2020 was the second hottest February on record. And on Monday, the European Union’s climate monitoring agency EU Copernicus reported that March 2020 was “on a par” with the second and third warmest Marches ever recorded.

Earth’s warming atmosphere is reacting to a rise of the potent greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which is now at its highest levels in at least 800,000 years, but more likely millions of years. The same gas (though much more of it) is responsible for the blistering temperatures on Venus.

“The continued onslaught of record and near-record global temperatures is a reminder that, while we’re understandably preoccupied with another crisis (the coronavirus pandemic), a more formidable one in the grand scheme of things looms in the background,” said climate scientist Michael Mann, director of the Earth System Science Center at Penn State University.

The consequences of a warmer atmosphere are too many to count. Most glaciers on Earth are fast receding. Wildfires are overpowering us. Meanwhile, the oceans absorb over 90 percent of the heat generated by human activity. These boosted, above-average water temperatures amplify the marine heat waves that cause the bleaching and widespread deaths of coral.

“As I write this sentence, the Great Barrier Reef is suffering its third major bleaching event in the space of five years, an unprecedented and foreboding development,” said Mann. “The ever-worsening nature of the climate crisis and the need to address it must guide any policy actions that are taken to address the Coronavirus crisis.”

For example, as the US federal government spends more than US$2 trillion to cushion the inevitable health, economic and environmental blows inflicted by the pandemic, the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis recommends investing in public transit and electric vehicle manufacturing tocreate new jobs and reduce carbon pollution from the transportation sector.” Perhaps this spending will be emphasized in the next major stimulus package.

It’s already likely that 2020 will end up as one of the warmest years on record. After an exceptionally warm January, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) says there’s a 98 percent chance of 2020 becoming one of the top five warmest years ever recorded. What’s more, there’s not even expected to be an El Niño event this year, which is a large-scale warming of the equatorial Pacific Ocean, which adds warmth to the atmosphere.

“Even as the pandemic grips the globe, the climate crisis remains unrelenting, with recent record or near-record temperatures signaling the onset of what might turn out to be the warmest year ever without the extra warming boost of an El Niño,” said Jon Overpeck, a climate scientist at the University of Michigan.

The big picture, however, is already clear:

Though the pandemic and the resulting shutdown of businesses amid critical social distancing measures is likely to affect global economies enough to slow the continued rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, this slowdown certainly won’t reverse Earth’s warming trend. Over the last 150 years or so, humanity has loaded the atmosphere with an enormous “pile” of CO2. This pile won’t be diminished, even by a global recession. Previous crises and recessions failed to stop climate change, too.

“The pile is still there,” Ralph Keeling, the director of the Scripps CO2 Program at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told Mashable. “We’re not getting rid of the pile.”

Overall, according to EU Copernicus, the last 12 months saw “few places” that experienced below-average temperatures.

Climate change is indeed truly global. The last decade, before the coronavirus pandemic began, was the warmest decade ever recorded. And the trend is amplifying. The last five years were the warmest five years on record.

“Earth’s climate system and climate scientists are all warning of the worsening climate crisis to come,” said Overpeck.

• This post was written by Mashable’s Mark Kauffman.

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