Icebergs near Ilulissat, Greenland, where climate change is having a large impact Ulrik Pedersen/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Global carbon emissions may have warmed Earth by 18 per cent more than previously thought, raising the prospect of the world having less time than expected to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement and avoid catastrophic climate change.
The global average temperature is thought to have climbed about 1.07掳C since the industrial revolution, up from a previous estimate of 0.91掳C. This update brings all three of the world鈥檚 key temperature data sets in line, suggesting the true temperature rise is at the upper end of previous ranges.
The finding means governments may have less time to curb carbon emissions to hold the temperature rise to 1.5掳C or 2掳C under the Paris deal, and current estimates of future warming may rise too.
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鈥淐limate change hasn鈥檛 suddenly got worse. It鈥檚 just our estimate of how much warming has taken place has improved,鈥 says Tim Osborn at the University of East Anglia, UK, who today published a paper with Met Office colleagues on the fifth update to the data, known as the
The 18 per cent increase is the biggest in years of HadCRUT revisions, but brings it roughly in line with the two other main data sets used to track global temperatures, run by US agencies NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Read more: What is the Paris climate agreement?
It is notable how closely these three independent data sets now resemble one another, says Kate Marvel at Columbia University, New York, who wasn’t involved in Osborn鈥檚 paper.
The change was overdue, say climate scientists. 鈥淗onestly, many of us have long recognised that the HadCRUT data set underestimated the warming,” says聽Michael Mann at Pennsylvania State University.
There are two main reasons for the 0.16掳C upwards revision in past warming. The biggest was changes to how the HadCRUT team looked at sea surface temperatures, specifically how it was measured by ships taking the temperature of sea water in their engine rooms.
The other is that gaps in the data set鈥檚 coverage of the Arctic, which has been warming two to three times as fast as the global average, have been filled in. Previously, grid squares for the region were left empty if there was no observational data 鈥 now they are estimated with data from nearby squares.
The new research may effectively shrink the world鈥檚 carbon budget, the amount that can be emitted without breaching temperature targets. The UN鈥檚 climate science panel, the IPCC, that global emissions need to roughly halve by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050 to have a two-thirds chance of staying under 1.5掳C.
It is too early to say how much today鈥檚 update may change that timeline. 鈥淭he IPCC have overestimated the available carbon budget through choices that tend to underestimate the warming we鈥檝e already experienced. That of course means that there is a lot more work to do if we are to avert dangerous warming,鈥 says Mann.
The other consequence of the higher warming is some estimates of climate sensitivity聽鈥 how much the world will warm based on a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide 鈥 will increase slightly, says Osborn.
Ultimately, the revision to HadCRUT doesn’t drastically change our situation, researchers told New 女生小视频, as governments and scientists rely on more than one of the major temperature data sets. 鈥淣one of these things change the big picture: the globe is warming and it鈥檚 due to human activities,鈥 says Gavin Schmidt at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
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