Study: Man-Made Heat In Oceans Is Surging, Has Doubled Since 1997
"The changes we're talking about, they are really, really big numbers."
XWASHINGTON (AP) — The amount of man-made heat energy absorbed by the seas has doubled since 1997, a study released Monday showed.
Scientists
have long known that more than 90 percent of the heat energy from
man-made global warming goes into the world's oceans instead of the
ground. And they've seen ocean heat content rise in recent years. But
the new study, using ocean-observing data that goes back to the British
research ship Challenger in the 1870s and including high-tech modern
underwater monitors and computer models, tracked how much man-made heat
has been buried in the oceans in the past 150 years.
The
world's oceans absorbed approximately 150 zettajoules of energy from
1865 to 1997, and then absorbed about another 150 in the next 18 years,
according to a study published Monday in the journal Nature Climate
Change.
To
put that in perspective, if you exploded one atomic bomb the size of
the one that dropped on Hiroshima every second for a year, the total
energy released would be 2 zettajoules. So since 1997, Earth's oceans
have absorbed man-made heat energy equivalent to a Hiroshima-style bomb
being exploded every second for 75 straight years.
"The
changes we're talking about, they are really, really big numbers," said
study co-author Paul Durack, an oceanographer at the Lawrence Livermore
National Lab in California. "They are nonhuman numbers."
Because
there are decades when good data wasn't available and computer
simulations are involved, the overall figures are rough but still are
reliable, the study's authors said. Most of the added heat has been
trapped in the upper 2,300 feet, but with every year the deeper oceans
also are absorbing more energy, they said.
But
the study's authors and outside experts say it's not the raw numbers
that bother them. It's how fast those numbers are increasing.
"After 2000 in particular the rate of change is really starting to ramp up," Durack said.
This
means the amount of energy being trapped in Earth's climate system as a
whole is accelerating, the study's lead author Peter Gleckler, a
climate scientist at Lawrence Livermore, said.
Because
the oceans are so vast and cold, the absorbed heat raises temperatures
by only a few tenths of a degree, but the importance is the energy
balance, Gleckler and his colleagues said. When oceans absorb all that
heat it keeps the surface from getting even warmer from the
heat-trapping gases spewed by the burning of coal, oil and gas, the
scientists said.
The
warmer the oceans get, the less heat they can absorb and the more heat
stays in the air and on land surface, the study's co-author, Chris
Forest at Pennsylvania State University, said.
"These
finding have potentially serious consequences for life in the oceans as
well as for patterns of ocean circulation, storm tracks and storm
intensity," said Oregon State University marine sciences professor Jane
Lubchenco, the former chief of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
One
outside scientist, Kevin Trenberth, climate analysis chief at the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, also has been looking at ocean
heat content and he said his ongoing work shows the Gleckler team
"significantly underestimates" how much heat the ocean has absorbed.
Jeff
Severinghaus at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography praised the
study, saying it "provides real, hard evidence that humans are
dramatically heating the planet."
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