2007 Second Warmest Year on Record 
2007 Second Warmest Year on Record
With the record for 2007
now complete, it is clear that temperatures around the world are
continuing their upward climb. The global average in 2007 was 14.73
degrees Celsius (58.5 degrees Fahrenheit)—the second warmest year on
record, only 0.03 degrees Celsius behind the 2005 maximum. January 2007
was the hottest January ever measured, a full 0.23 degrees Celsius
warmer than the previous record. August was also a record for that
month and September was the second warmest September recorded.
Looking
at the northern hemisphere alone, 2007 temperatures averaged 15.04
degrees Celsius (59.1 degrees Fahrenheit)—easily the hottest year in
the northern half of the globe since the record began in 1880, and more
than a degree warmer than the 1951–80 average. Paleo-temperature
records from ancient tree rings suggest that the northern hemisphere is
now warmer than at any time in at least the last 1,200 years.
The
year 2007 fits into a pattern of steadily increasing global average
temperature, with the eight warmest years on record all occurring in
the last decade. According to the dataset maintained by NASA’s Goddard
Institute for Space Studies, global average temperature rose from 14.02
degrees Celsius in the 1970s to 14.26 degrees in the 1980s and then to
14.40 degrees in the 1990s. In the first eight years of the
twenty-first century, the world averaged 14.64 degrees Celsius. (See
data.) Since 1990, mean global temperature has risen by 0.33 degrees, a
rate of increase faster than climate models had predicted.
Although
2007 did not post a new record high, the year stands out as being
extremely warm despite several natural factors that usually cool the
planet. El Niño conditions in the southern Pacific tend to increase the
global average temperature, and yet the second half of 2007 saw the
opposite develop—a La Niña, which would usually depress global
temperature. This is in stark contrast to conditions in 1998, the third
warmest year, when temperatures were boosted around 0.2 degrees Celsius
by the strongest El Niño of the century. In addition to the moderate La
Niña, solar intensity in 2007 was slightly lower than average because
the year was a minimum in the 11-year solar sunspot cycle. The
combination of these factors would normally produce cooler
temperatures, yet 2007 was still one of the warmest years in human
history. This strongly suggests that the warming effect of increased
greenhouse gas concentrations is now dwarfing other influences on the
Earth’s climate.
The impact of the exceptional warmth in 2007
was especially apparent in the Arctic, where several feedback
mechanisms amplify the effect of increasing greenhouse gas
concentrations. Summer sea-ice extent in the Arctic Ocean shrank
dramatically to a new low, 23 percent below the previous 2005 record.
This opened the Northwest Passage for the first time in recorded
history and prompted a scramble to claim large swaths of the newly
exposed Arctic.
Regionally, several areas saw record-setting
temperatures in 2007. Southeastern Europe suffered through temperatures
as high as 45 degrees Celsius in a heat wave that killed up to 500
people. In Japan, thermometers in August reached 40.9 degrees Celsius,
the highest temperature ever recorded in that country. Chart-topping
temperatures and severe drought conditions proved a lethal combination,
as extensive wildfires spread in both Greece and the American West in
July and August.
While some areas baked under intensive heat or
drought conditions, others were inundated by record amounts of rain.
England and Wales experienced widespread flooding and damage estimated
at £3 billion ($6 billion) during the wettest May to July period since
records began in 1766. In South Asia, some of the worst flooding in
decades occurred during the monsoon season, affecting at least 25
million people and killing more than 2,500. Fifteen countries across
Africa—from Ghana to Ethiopia—were affected by severe floods in the
summer of 2007. These displaced hundreds of thousands of people and
washed away crops and farmland, seriously damaging food security in the
region. Other countries that saw exceptional or record flooding in 2007
include China, Indonesia, Mexico, and Uruguay.
Intense rainfall
events and flooding will only become more common in the future, as
climate models show that warmer temperatures will cause a greater share
of total precipitation to fall in extreme events. This means that there
will be more heavy rainstorms but also more dry periods, producing both
more severe droughts and more frequent, more intense floods. Rainfall
data from the twentieth century show precipitation intensity increasing
over the last two decades, suggesting this trend is already beginning.
In
2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Nobel
prize–winning body of more than 1,250 scientists, released its Fourth
Assessment Report, which detailed the likely climatic consequences if
human beings continue to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. It
reported that unabated emissions would result in a temperature rise of
between 1.1 and 6.4 degrees Celsius (2 to 12 degrees Fahrenheit) during
the twenty-first century.
To put this in perspective,
temperatures over the last 100 years rose by a comparably small 0.74
degrees Celsius, and yet this appears to have already contributed to
trends of more heat waves, longer and more intense droughts, higher sea
level, more frequent heavy rain events, and stronger hurricanes. Future
warming on the scale projected by the IPCC will bring with it a
multitude of outcomes that can only be described as disastrous. These
include hundreds of millions of people exposed to increased water
stress, a third of species at increasing risk of extinction, widespread
coral mortality, grain yield declines at low latitudes, the loss of 30
percent of remaining coastal wetlands, and the disappearance of
glaciers feed some of the world’s major rivers.
The temperature
record for 2007 shows that we have now fully entered into what some are
calling a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, in which human
activities are the main driver of the global climate system. The many
effects of warmer temperature, which we are already beginning to see,
will only become more severe and more costly to society if greenhouse
gas emissions are not cut quickly and dramatically. Our future now
depends on what we do to limit warming by moving away from
climate-disrupting fossil fuels and toward renewable energy and
energy-efficient technologies.
Source: http://www.ecomall.com/greenshopping/2007hotearth.htm
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