In hot water: Ocean warming hits another record high on climate change
- A new study has found that, for the sixth year in a row, the world’s oceans have been hotter than they’ve ever been in recent history due to human-induced climate change.
- The research team found that last year, the upper 2,000 meters (6,600 feet) in all oceans absorbed 14 zettajoules more of human-made energy than the previous year, equal to about 145 times the world’s electricity generation in 2020.
- A warming ocean creates a multitude of issues, driving extreme weather events, accelerating sea level rise, disrupting marine biodiversity, threatening global food security, and melting polar ice shelves.
- Experts say the best way to reduce ocean climate impacts is to lower carbon emissions and meet the Paris Agreement goal of not allowing global warming to surpass 1.5°C (2.7°F) over preindustrial levels.
The ocean is now warmer than it’s ever been in recent history, according to a new study. And this isn’t the first time such a record has been set. For the past six years, ocean temperatures have exceeded each previous year in a trend one scientist calls “inexorable.”
Human-induced climate change is to blame, says John Abraham, co-author of the new study published Jan. 11 in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences.
“We should be very concerned,” Abraham, a professor of thermal sciences at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota, U.S, told Mongabay in a video interview. “But frankly, we should have been concerned years ago.”
The research team used a network of high-tech autonomous ocean buoys to measure global ocean temperatures, which they compared to data from the 1950s. They found that in 2021, the upper 2,000 meters (6,600 feet) in all of the oceans absorbed 14 zettajoules more of human-made energy than the previous year, equal to about 145 times the world’s electricity generation in 2020.
Abraham puts it another way: “It’s the equivalent of seven Hiroshima atomic bombs detonated every second of every day of every week of every month.
“The story we’ve been telling since 2018 is that every year it’s getting hotter and hotter,” he added. “And records are being broken as this inexorable, unrelenting rise of ocean temperatures occurs.”
‘Oceans drive weather’
The researchers found that ocean warming persisted despite a La Niña event in early 2021 in the Indo-Pacific basin, which should have cooled down the waters.
While the ocean is generally getting hotter, this warming isn’t consistent across the entire globe. The researchers found that certain parts of the Atlantic Ocean, Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean experienced more pronounced warming due to wind patterns and currents.
Temperature shifts across the world’s ocean have already led to significant changes in the distribution of fish, which can impact global food security, said William Cheung, professor and director of the University of British Columbia’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries, who was not involved in the study.
“Fisheries are experiencing reduction in catches of cooler-water associated species but increasing potential production of warmer-water associated species,” Cheung told Mongabay in an email.
Warming is also destabilizing long-established ocean ecosystems. Warm-water fish, for example, are increasingly moving north into once-frigid Arctic waters where they weren’t previously found, and outcompeting cold-water fish such as Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida), also known as polar cod. Ocean ecosystem disruptions are expected to accelerate as warming escalates.
The warming ocean also drives extreme weather, both on land as well as over the ocean. For instance, increased ocean temperature contributed to marine heat waves like the one that killed hundreds of millions of marine animals, including starfish, mussels and sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka), in the Pacific Northwest last year. In 2015, a marine heat wave nicknamed “The Blob” also caused widespread coral bleaching around the Hawaiian islands.
A 2018 research paper published in Earth’s Future linked ocean heat with Hurricane Harvey, a category four storm that hit Texas in 2017 and caused about $125 billion in damage.
“Oceans and atmosphere are dynamic systems and respond by trying to get rid of excess heat,” Kevin Trenberth, co-author of both the recent paper in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences and the paper in Earth’s Future, told Mongabay in an email. “That is why the storms are more vigorous.”
A warming marine environment can also lead to other extreme weather events, such as heat waves, sudden heavy rainfall, and drought. It can make dry parts of the world drier and wet parts of the world wetter.
“Oceans drive weather,” Abraham said. “Any weather that you’re experiencing right now has been impacted by global warming, and as the oceans warm, the impacts will become larger and larger into the future.”
Besides ocean warming, carbon dioxide emissions can also lead to a process called ocean acidification, which can decrease fish populations and make it impossible for calcifying organisms like corals and oysters to form their hard shells or skeletons. It’s currently believed that the ocean absorbs about 25% of atmospheric carbon produced by human activities.
Ocean water also expands as it warms, helping increase global sea levels. Warming oceans also accelerate the melting of the floating ice shelves surrounding Antarctica. The critical problem here, say scientists, is that warmer seawater is undermining the shelves, which could then suddenly collapse. These ice shelves currently act like corks in a bottle; their loss could greatly quicken the flow of land ice sheets into the sea. This process is already underway on the Thwaites glacier in western Antarctica, which if it melted completely could raise sea levels by 1.2 m (3.9 ft) within two centuries.
Even if carbon emissions were to stop tomorrow, the world’s oceans would still continue to warm and sea levels would continue to rise since heat gradually penetrates deeper and deeper into the ocean, initially warming at the top and then pushing downward, Trenberth said.
“It takes time for the warming signal to penetrate down and that continues for decades, and sea level rise continues for a century or more,” he said.
Breaching the climate boundary
Cheung said the best way to reduce climate impacts on the ocean is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, adding that we have more knowledge than ever before about the climate crisis and possible solutions.
“The increasing awareness of the climate crisis and demand for climate solutions give me hope,” he said.
According to the planetary boundaries concept, as proposed by an international team of scientists first in 2009, and which became mainstream with David Attenborough’s Netflix documentary Breaking Boundaries in 2021, humanity has already surpassed a critical threshold for climate change — putting Earth’s operating systems at grave risk of failure. The safe operating level for climate change has been determined to be 350 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, but this was overshot in 1988.
Ocean acidification is another of the planetary boundaries. While the safe operating level is not believed to have been surpassed so far, experts say soaring carbon dioxide emissions could lead to a breach of this threshold that could irreversibly change the oceans and threaten life on Earth as we know it.
At the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, last November, many nations made enhanced pledges to lower emissions, but experts say those promises, even if achieved, won’t come close to meeting the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to a 1.5° Celsius (2.7° Fahrenheit) increase over preindustrial levels.
While the findings of the new ocean warming study are deeply concerning, Abraham said he feels optimistic about the development and accessibility of clean energy sources.
“Clearly, climate change is going to be a problem both in our generations, as well as a few following generations,” Abraham said. “But at least we have a ray of hope that clean energy is now mature to a point where it will displace greenhouse gas-producing energy sources.”
Citations:
Cheng, L., Abraham, J., Trenberth, K. E., Fasullo, J., Boyer, T., Mann, M. E., … Reagan, J. (2022). Another record: Ocean warming continues through 2021 despite La Niña conditions. Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. doi:10.1007/s00376-022-1461-3
Trenberth, K. E., Cheng, L., Jacobs, P., Zhang, Y., & Fasullo, J. (2018). Hurricane Harvey links to ocean heat content and climate change adaptation. Earth’s Future, 6(5), 730-744. doi:10.1029/2018ef000825
Watson, A. J., Schuster, U., Shutler, J. D., Holding, T., Ashton, I. G., Landschützer, P., … Goddijn-Murphy, L. (2020). Revised estimates of ocean-atmosphere CO2 flux are consistent with ocean carbon inventory. Nature Communications, 11(1). doi:10.1038/s41467-020-18203-3
Rockström, J., Steffen, W., Noone, K., Persson, Å., Chapin, F. S., Lambin, E. F., … Foley, J. A. (2009). A safe operating space for humanity. Nature, 461(7263), 472-475. doi:10.1038/461472a
Guinotte, J. M., & Fabry, V. J. (2008). Ocean acidification and its potential effects on marine ecosystems. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1134(1), 320-342. doi:10.1196/annals.1439.013
Banner image caption: The sun over the ocean. Image by PxHere. (CC0 Public Domain).
Elizabeth Claire Alberts is a staff writer for Mongabay. Follow her on Twitter @ECAlberts.
FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten