Slowing down global warming

There has been a new study of the temporary slowdown in the global average surface temperature warming trend observed between 1998 and 2013 which has shown that the phenomenon represented a redistribution of energy within the Earth system, with Earth’s ocean absorbing the extra heat.

‘The global warming hiatus’ is how the phenomenon is being referred to as some. The global average surface temperature, measured by satellites and direct observations, is considered a key indicator of climate change.

Lead author of the study, Xiao-Hai Yan of the University of Delaware, Newark, along with scientists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, and several other institutions discuss new understanding of the phenomenon in a study published in Earth’s Future.

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Yan said: “The hiatus period gives scientists an opportunity to understand uncertainties in how climate systems are measured, as well as to fill in the gap in what scientists know.”

Veronica Nieves, a researcher at JPL and the University of California, Los Angeles and co-author of the new study said: “NASA’s examination of ocean observations has provided its own unique contribution to our knowledge of decadal climate trends and global warming.”

Nieves continued: “Scientists have more confidence now that Earth’s ocean has continued to warm continuously through time. But the rate of global surface warming can fluctuate due to natural variations in the climate system over periods of a decade or so.”

Where’s the missing heat?
As it’s difficult to reach complete consensus on such a complex topic, a thorough review of the literature and much discussion and debate revealed a number of key points on which these leading scientists concur:

  • Natural variability plays a large role in the rate of global mean surface warming on decadal time scales.
  • Improved understanding of how the ocean distributes and redistributes heat will help the scientific community better monitor Earth’s energy budget. Earth’s energy budget is a complex calculation of how much energy enters our climate system from the sun and what happens to it: how much is stored by the land, ocean or atmosphere.

Yan commented: “To better monitor Earth’s energy budget and its consequences, the ocean is most important to consider because the amount of heat it can store is extremely large when compared to the land or atmospheric capacity.”

According to the paper, arguably, ocean heat content, from the surface to the seafloor, might be a more appropriate measure of how much our planet is warming.

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Charting future research
In the near term, the researchers hope this paper will lay the foundation for future research in the global change field. To begin, they suggest the climate community replace the term ‘global warming hiatus’ with ‘global surface warming slowdown’ to eliminate confusion.

Yan said: “This terminology more accurately describes the slowdown in global mean surface temperature rise in the late 20th century.”

The scientists also called for continued support of current and future technologies for ocean monitoring to reduce observation errors in sea surface temperature and ocean heat content, including maintaining Argo, the main system for monitoring ocean heat content, and the development of Deep Argo to monitor the lower half of the ocean.

Yan added: “Although these regions represent only a fraction of the ocean volume, the changing rate of ocean heat content is faster here, and real-time data and more research are needed to quantify and understand what is happening.”

Variability and heat sequestration over specific regions (e.g., Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern Oceans, etc.) require further investigation, the authors conclude. However, there is broad agreement among the scientists and in the literature that the slowdown in the global mean surface temperature increase from 1998 to 2013 was due to increased uptake of heat energy by the global ocean.

More information: American Geophysical Union

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