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    Home » Surge in ocean heat is a sign climate change is accelerating

    Surge in ocean heat is a sign climate change is accelerating

    Team_NationalNewsBriefBy Team_NationalNewsBriefJanuary 28, 2025 Science No Comments2 Mins Read
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    High sea temperatures contributed to stormy weather in California in late 2023

    Kevin Carter/Getty Images

    The surge in ocean temperatures to record-breaking levels in 2023 and 2024 is a sign that the pace of climate change has accelerated, say researchers.

    Global ocean temperatures hit record highs for 450 days straight in 2023 and early 2024. Although some of the extra heat can be explained by an El Niño weather pattern emerging in the Pacific Ocean, about 44 per cent of the record warmth is down to the world’s oceans absorbing heat from the sun at an accelerating rate, according to Chris Merchant at the University of Reading, UK.

    Merchant and his colleagues used satellite data to analyse ocean warming over the past four decades, concluding that the rate of warming has more than quadrupled since 1985.

    The team says this rapid acceleration is down to a sharp change in Earth’s energy imbalance (EEI), a measure of how much heat is being trapped in the atmosphere. EEI has roughly doubled since 2010, causing the oceans to soak up much more heat now than they used to.

    “The oceans set the pace for global warming in general,” says Merchant. “So, as an extension, global warming as a whole, including the land, has therefore accelerated.” Merchant says he is “personally convinced” that accelerating climate change was a major factor in the recent surge in ocean temperatures.

    Based on their analysis, Merchant and his team predict that the rate of ocean warming could continue to increase rapidly in the coming decades. “If the EEI trend extrapolates into the future… then we can expect as much warming in the next 20 years as we have had in the last 40 years, which is quite a marked acceleration,” says Merchant.

    Although climate models do expect the rate of climate change to accelerate, Merchant’s analysis suggests real-world trends are in line with the most pessimistic model predictions. “The fact that this data-driven analysis is putting us at the high end of what models might have predicted is a matter that needs to be watched,” he says.

    However, early data suggests that EEI dropped in 2024 after a record spike in 2023. This data might suggest warming rates may not be accelerating in line with worst-case scenarios, some researchers argue.

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