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Record sea surface heat sparks fears of warming surge


By AFP
Published : 05 May 2023 01:52 AM | Updated : 05 May 2023 01:52 AM

With sea surface temperatures swelling to newhighs in recent weeks, scientists warn that humanity's carbon pollution hasthe potential to turn oceans into a global warming "time bomb".

Oceans absorb most of the heat caused by planet-warming gases, causing heatwaves that harm aquatic life, altering weather patterns and disruptingcrucial planet-regulating systems.

While sea surface temperatures normally recede relatively quickly from annual peaks, this year they stayed high, with scientists warning that thisunderscores an underappreciated but grave impact of climate change.

"The ocean, like a sponge, absorbs more than 90 percent of the increase inheat caused by human activities," said leading oceanologist Jean-BaptisteSallee, of the French research agency CNRS.

Year by year ocean warming is increasing at "an absolutely staggering rate",he told AFP.

In early April, the average surface temperature of the oceans, excluding

polar waters, reached 21.1 degrees Celsius, beating the annual record of 21C set in March 2016, according to data from the United States NOAA observatory that goes back to 1982.

Although temperatures began to drop at the end of the month, they have remained above seasonal records for the past six weeks, with fears that the

looming warming El Nino weather phenomenon could load even more heat into theclimate system.

The most immediate consequence of the surge in ocean temperatures is more marine heatwaves, which he said "act like underwater fires" with the potential to irreversibly degrade thousands of square kilometres of underwater forest -- for example of kelp or corals.

 Higher sea surface temperatures disrupt the mixing of nutrients and oxygen

that are key to supporting life and potentially alter the ocean's crucial

role in absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.

"As the water is warmer, there will be increased evaporation and a high risk

of more intense cyclones, and perhaps consequences on ocean currents," said

oceanologist Catherine Jeandel, of CNRS.

Temperatures are also rising throughout the water column and all that heat

does not disappear.

Scientists expect that excess heat stored in the world's waters will

eventually be returned to the Earth system and contribute to more global

warming.

"As we heat it up, the ocean becomes a bit like a time bomb," said Jeandel.

- El Nino -

The recent record might be explained by the end of the temporary atmospheric

phenomenon known as La Nina -- which tends to have a cooling effect -- and

the expected arrival of its warming opposite, El Nino.

"During El Nino years, the deep ocean releases heat to the surface and warms

the atmosphere," said Sallee, one of the authors on the landmark UN reports

on climate change.

But scientists have cautioned that the real concern is the temperature rise

over decades -- and beyond.

When you take into account the background rise in sea surface temperatures,

"2023 doesn't look too out of place relative to other El Nino years," climate

scientist David Ho, a professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said on

Twitter.

"It's the long-term sea surface temperature trend that should alarm us," he

added.

- Heating the deep -

In January, an international group of researchers said heat content in the

upper oceans in 2022 exceeded the previous year's levels by around 10 Zetta

joules -- equivalent to 100 times the electricity generation worldwide in

2021.

Records going back to the late 1950s show a relentless rise in surface

temperatures with almost continuous increases going back to around 1985.

While the sea's surface responds relatively quickly to global warming, the

deep ocean "typically adjusts over centuries to millennia", said Karina Von

Schuckmann, a researcher specialised in ocean monitoring at Mercator Ocean.

Just like the sea level rise that will play out over hundreds of years as a

result of today's carbon emissions, she said ocean heat content will

"continue to increase long after surface temperature stabilises".

"In other words, projections suggest that historic ocean warming is

irreversible this century", with the ultimate net warming dependent on our

emissions.

For Frederic Hourdin, research director at the CNRS Dynamic Meteorology

Laboratory, the latest surface temperature should raise awareness of the

bigger climate change picture.

Clearly, he said, we are still "not sufficiently aware that the objective is

to do without oil and coal".