2020 is on course to be the hottest year, meteorologists say
Although the coronavirus lockdown has temporarily cleared the skies, it has done nothing to cool the climate, which needs deeper, longer-term measures, the scientists say
This year is on course to be the world's hottest since the measurement period began. Meterologists estimated it showing a 50% to 75% chance that 2020 will break the record set four years ago.
The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration calculates there is a 75% chance that 2020 will be the hottest year since measurements began, reports The Guardian.
Heat records have been broken from the Antarctic to Greenland since January, which has surprised many scientists because this is not an El Niño year, the phenomenon usually associated with high temperatures.
Although the coronavirus lockdown has temporarily cleared the skies, it has done nothing to cool the climate, which needs deeper, longer-term measures, the scientists say, reports The Guardian.
The US agency is closing monitoring the temparature trends of this year with 2016. The year when temperatures soared early in the year due to an unusually intense El Niño and then came down.
They said there was a 99.9% likelihood that 2020 will be one of the top five years for temperatures on record.
A separate calculation by Gavin Schmidt, the director of the Nasa Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, found a 60% chance this year will set a record.
The Met Office is more cautious, estimating a 50% likelihood that 2020 will set a new record, though the UK institution says this year will extend the run of warm years since 2015, which is the hottest period on record.
Abnormal weather is increasingly the norm as temperature records fall year after year, and month after month.
This January was the hottest on record, leaving many Arctic nations without snow in their capital cities. In February, a research base in the Antarctic registered a temperature of more than 20C (68F) for the first time on the southern continent. At the other end of the world Qaanaaq, in Greenland, set an April record of 6C on Sunday.
In the first quarter, the heating was most pronounced in eastern Europe and Asia, where temperatures were 3C above average.
In the UK, the trend is less pronounced. The daily maximum UK temperature for April so far is 3.1C above average.
Karsten Haustein, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford, said global warming was nudging closer to 1.2C above pre-industrial levels. He said his online tracker showed a relatively conservative level of 1.14C of warming due to gaps in the data, but that this could rise to 1.17C or higher once the latest figures were incorporated.
Although the pandemic has at least temporarily reduced the amount of new emissions, he said the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere remains a huge concern.
"The climate crisis continues unabated," Haustein said. "The emissions will go down this year, but the concentrations keep on rising. We are very unlikely to be able to notice any slowdown in the built-up of atmospheric GHG levels. But we have the unique chance now to reconsider our choices and use the corona crisis as a catalyst for more sustainable means of transport and energy production (via incentives, taxes, carbon prices etc)."