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| The report said the highest rates of ocean warming are occuring in the southern ocean, where warming has also reached the deepest layers (AFP Photo/Brian Bielmann) |
Geneva
(AFP) - Ocean heat hit a record high in 2018, the United Nations said Thursday,
raising urgent new concerns about the threat global warming is posing to marine
life.
In its
latest State of the Climate overview, the World Meteorological Organization
(WMO) reaffirmed that the last four years had been the hottest on record --
figures previously announced in provisional drafts of the flagship report.
But the
final version of the report highlighted worrying developments in other climate
indicators beyond surface temperature.
"2018
saw new records for ocean heat content in the upper 700 metres," a WMO
statement said.
The agency
said the UN had data for heat content in the upper 700 metres (2,290 feet) of
the ocean dating back to 1955.
Last year
also saw new heat records for the ocean's upper 2,000 metres, but data for that
range only goes back to 2005.
The
previous records for both ranges were set in 2017.
UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the latest findings as
"another strong wake-up call" for governments, cities and businesses
to take action.
"It
proves what we have been saying that climate change is moving faster than our
efforts to address it," he said at UN headquarters in New York.
The United
Nations is hosting a major summit on September 23 that is billed as a
last-chance opportunity for leaders to tackle climate change, which Guterres
has described as the defining issue of our time.
The UN
chief has urged world leaders to come to the summit with concrete plans,
instead of speeches, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 45 percent over the
next decade and to net zero by 2050.
Warming
oceans
About 93
percent of excess heat -- trapped around the Earth by greenhouse gases that
come from the burning of fossil fuels -- accumulates in the world's oceans.
Research
published earlier this year in the US journal Science showed that warming in
the oceans is on pace with measurements of rising air temperature.
Some models
predict the temperature of the top 2,000 metres of the world's oceans will rise
nearly 0.8 degrees Celsius by the end of the century if nothing is done to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions, according to Science.
Oceans are
also not warming evenly across the planet.
The WMO
report said the highest rates of ocean warming are occurring in the southern
ocean, where warming has also reached the deepest layers.
This could
result in sea levels being substantially different in different places, experts
have previously said.
The thermal
expansion -- water swelling as it warms -- is expected to raise sea levels 12
inches (30 centimetres), above any sea level rise from melting glaciers and ice
sheets, according to the research published in Science.

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