09-07-2023
PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND: As a warming Earth simmered into worrisome new territory this week, scientists said the unofficial records being set for average planetary temperature were a clear sign of how pollutants released by humans are warming their environment but the heat is also just one way the planet is telling us something is gravely wrong, they said.
“Heat sets the pace of our climate in so many ways … it’s never just the heat,” Kim Cobb, a climate scientist at Brown University, told media.
Dying coral reefs, more intense nor’easters and the wildfire smoke that has choked much of North America this year are among the many other signals of climate distress.
“The increasing heating of our planet caused by fossil fuel use is not unexpected, but it is dangerous for us humans and for the ecosystems we depend on. We need to stop it, fast,” said Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
Some other recent “firsts” and events that indicate climate change has entered uncharted territory:
Most of the planet is covered by oceans, which have absorbed 90 percent of the recent warming caused by planet-warming gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane. In April, global ocean temperature soared to 21.1C (69.98F), which was attributed to the combination of greenhouse gas emissions and the early El Nino formation. Newly published data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service documented “exceptionally warm” ocean temperatures in the North Atlantic with “extreme” marine heat waves near Ireland, the UK and in the Baltic Sea.
Several rounds of wildfire smoke, originating from northern Canada, brought dangerous air quality levels to eastern North America. The high levels of wildfire smoke have become familiar on the West Coast, but scientists have said that climate change will make wildfires and smoke both more likely and more intense, and that the East Coast will see more of it. (Int’l News Desk)