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    • Breaking news: Climate change: Oceans "soaking up more heat than estimated" 0/2

      • Lecture1.1
        Breaking news: Climate change: Oceans “soaking up more heat than estimated” 30 min
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        Quiz Breaking News: Climate change: Oceans “soaking up more heat than estimated” 3 questions

      Breaking news: Climate change: Oceans “soaking up more heat than estimated”

      Climate change: Oceans “soaking up more heat than estimated”

      The world has seriously underestimated the amount of heat soaked up by our oceans over the past 25 years, researchers say.

      Their study suggests that the seas have absorbed 60% more than previously thought. they say it means the Earth is more sensitive to fossil fuel emissionsthan estimated.

      This  could make it much more difficult to keep global warming within safe levels this century. According to the last major assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the world´s oceans have taken up over 90% of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gases.

      But this new study says that every year, for the past 25 yeats, we haveput about 150 times the amount of energy used to generate electricity globally into the seas -60% more than previous estimates and that is a big problem.

      Scientists basetheir predictions about how much the Earth is warming by adding up all the excess heat that is produced by the Known amount of greenhouse gases that have been emitted by human activities.

      This new calculation shows that far more heat than we thought has been going into oceans. But it also means that far more heat than we thought has been generated by the warming gases we have emitted. Therefore, more heat from the same amount of gas means the Earth is more sensitive to CO2.

      The researchers involved in the study believe the new finding will make it much harder to keep within the temperature rise targets set by governments in the Paris agreement.

      As well as potentially making it more difficult to keep warming below 1.5 or even 2C this century, all that extra heat going into the oceans will prompt some significant changes in the water. “A warmer ocean will hold lessosygen, and that has implications for marine ecosystems”, said Dr Resplandy.

       

       

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