New Research Shows Global Warming Speeding Up
Scientists find 'missing heat' in deep ocean waters
Common Dreams
28 March 2013
Lauren McCauley, staff writer
The rate of global warming is speeding up, say scientists, despite
the apparent stagnation in the rise of global surface air
temperatures that may have prevented people from recognizing "the
danger of the climate problem we face."
A new study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters
says that in the past 15 years we've undergone "the most sustained
warming trend."
The researchers attribute this "missing heat" phenomena to the
fact that about 90% of overall global warming goes into heating
the oceans, and the oceans have been cooking.
The myth that global warming has slowed—which is frequently cited
by climate deniers and perpetuated by "fundamentally flawed"
studies that do not account for the warming of deep ocean
waters—has had the dangerous effect of "lull[ing] many people into
a false and unwarranted sense of security," writes Skeptical
Science, "with many people wrongly believing global warming has
paused when in reality it has accelerated."
The article, "Distinctive climate signals in reanalysis of global
ocean heat content," explains how the strength of recent La
Niña events has caused a large amount of heat from global
warming to be transferred to the deep oceans. According to the
study, "In the last decade, about 30% of the warming has occurred
below 700 m, contributing significantly to an acceleration of the
warming trend."
Meanwhile, the warming at the surface has slowed down in recent
years due to subsequent "sharp cooling" events, such as volcanic
eruptions and El Niño patterns.
Leading climatologist Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Underground
explains that, despite this apparent slowdown, the "total amount
of heat going in the atmosphere/oceans/surface has continued
unabated."
As report co-author Kevin Trenberth explained to Skeptical
Science, "It means less short term warming at the surface but at
the expense of a greater earlier long-term warming, and faster sea
level rise," because the extra heat energy causes ocean water to
expand.
"The global warming end result will be the same," writes Skeptical
Science, "but the pattern of surface warming over time may be
different than we expect." They conclude:
Most importantly, everybody (climate scientists and contrarians
included) must learn to stop equating surface and shallow ocean
warming with global warming. [...] We need to measure global
warming by accounting for all changes in global heat content,
including the deeper oceans. Otherwise we can easily fool
ourselves into underestimating the danger of the climate problem
we face.