Even without an El Nino kick, 2017 heads for top-three ranking for global heat

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Advertisement

This was published 6 years ago

Even without an El Nino kick, 2017 heads for top-three ranking for global heat

By Peter Hannam
Updated

The world is headed for its third warmest year on record, even without the boost from an El Nino, as the signs of climate change continue to mount, the World Meteorological Organisation said.

In a report released to coincide with the opening of the Bonn climate conference in Germany on Monday, the WMO said the five-year average was now running at about 1 degree warmer than the average for 1880-1900 period. The same conference two years ago in Paris agreed to keep warming to below 2 degrees.

Based on the first nine months of the year, 2017 is unlikely to match 2016 - the hottest year on record - or the previous year. Still, it is likely to dislodge 2014 as the third warmest.

Such a ranking for 2017 will be notable not least because El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) conditions have been neutral this year, removing the warming boost the past two years had from an El Nino.

People in South Sudan line up to be registered with the UN World Food Program - some 23 million people were displaced by extreme weather events this past year.

People in South Sudan line up to be registered with the UN World Food Program - some 23 million people were displaced by extreme weather events this past year.Credit: AP

"It's clearly the warmest year [on record] that doesn't have a warming influence," said Blair Trewin, senior climatologist at the Bureau of Meteorology and scientific coordinator of the WMO report.

According to the first 10 months of the year, Australia will have its third-warmest year on record, the bureau said in a separate report.

Mean temperatures are running 0.96 degrees above the 1961-90 average used by the bureau. Maximum temperatures were even more unusual, running at 1.34 degrees above average.

The WMO's report comes a week after the United Nations agency said greenhouse gases are now at levels not seen for perhaps five million years. Carbon dioxide levels rose the most on record last year, increasing 3.3 parts per million to 403.3 ppm.

Advertisement
The Blue Cut fire in August was one of many during California's record hot summer.

The Blue Cut fire in August was one of many during California's record hot summer.Credit: AP

23.5 million displaced

The report also details many of the dislocations caused by extreme weather in the past year, including some 761,000 internal refugees in Somalia alone because of drought.

By June, more than half the African nation's cropland was affected by dry conditions, while animal herds have dived 40-60 per cent since December 2016.

Italian composer and pianist Ludovico Einaudi performs one of his own compositions on a floating platform in the Arctic Ocean, in front of the Wahlenbergbreen glacier, in Svalbard, Norway, to highlight the impact of climate change.

Italian composer and pianist Ludovico Einaudi performs one of his own compositions on a floating platform in the Arctic Ocean, in front of the Wahlenbergbreen glacier, in Svalbard, Norway, to highlight the impact of climate change.Credit: AP

Globally, 23.5 million people were displaced last year by weather-related disasters, WMO said.

The intense hurricane season in the Atlantic provided the most unusual cyclonic activity in an otherwise slightly quieter than average year.

A koala that's just had spray to keep cool during a heatwave at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve near Canberra.

A koala that's just had spray to keep cool during a heatwave at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve near Canberra.Credit: Nicole Hill

Among the three category 4 or 5 hurricanes that hit the US mainland this year, one outstanding weather statistic was the 1539 mm or rain recorded at Nederland, Texas - the largest ever recorded for a single rainfall event on the US mainland - during Hurricane Harvey.

WMO's science team is yet to determine whether a warming planet is making slow-moving, land-falling hurricanes more or less frequent. Still, "it is likely that anthropogenic climate change made rainfall rates more intense, and that ongoing sea-level rise exacerbated storm surge impacts", the report said.

During the El Nino itself, sea-level increases peaked at a rate of 10 mm a year. "That was effectively three years' worth of extra sea-level rise in a year," Dr Trewin said.

With El Ninos, the Pacific equatorial trade winds stall and reverse, resulting in the ocean taking up less heat and even giving some back to the atmosphere. Conditions now favour the reverse event, a La Nina, which may point to some cooling in 2018.

Fire and ice

2017 was also a big year for wildfires, with Chile reporting eight times the usual forest fire destruction. It had 614,000 hectares burnt after extreme heat following a drought.

California's hottest summer on record also contributed to a bad fire season. The area scorched across the 48 contiguous US states was almost 50 per cent above the 2007-2016 average, while the region burned across the border in Canada was up eight-fold compared with a 2006-2015 average.

A host of other climate signals were evident in the past year even if records weren't always set.

Data sets varied, for instance, as to whether the annual maximum Arctic sea ice extent marked a new record low in March 2017. But the 10 record low maximum years have all occurred since 2007.

The Greenland ice sheet, meanwhile, added 40 billion tonnes in 2017, bucking a trend - perhaps only briefly - that has seen the ice sheet lose about 3600 billion tonnes since 2002.

"It's more a moisture signal, rather than a temperature one," Dr Trewin said, noting Greenland had received heavier than usual snowfall in the past year.

Australian trends

In Australia, NSW and Queensland stand out as being unusually warm so far this year. (See chart below.)

"NSW has the highest January-October anomaly on record, but 2014 - which finished very hot - had an annual anomaly which was higher," Dr Trewin said.

"So it's harder to say that NSW is 'on track' for its warmest year on record," he said.

In Queensland's case, though, merely average conditions for the final two months of 2017 would be enough to make it that state's hottest year on record for data that goes back to 1910, he said.

Loading

Rainfall so far this year has been mixed for Australia, with the east relatively dry and the west wetter than normal. (See chart below.)

The key Murray-Darling agricultural basin is having its driest year since 2006, one of the years of the Millennium Drought, Dr Trewin said.

Most Viewed in Environment

Loading