Oceans absorb record heat for eighth year in a row

In 2025, the world's oceans took in a record amount of heat for the eighth consecutive year. This marked another escalation in marine warming trends tracked since 2018. The heat absorbed was equivalent to the energy needed to boil 2 billion Olympic swimming pools.

A team of international researchers has been monitoring ocean heat absorption annually since 2018. Their latest analysis, covering 2025, shows the oceans setting a new record for heat intake. This continues a streak unbroken for eight years, with each year surpassing the previous in absorbed energy.

The scale of this warming is immense. The heat gained by the oceans in 2025 matches the power required to heat and boil 2 billion Olympic-sized swimming pools. Such figures underscore the relentless pace of climate-driven changes in marine environments.

These measurements highlight ongoing global climate dynamics, where oceans act as major heat sinks. The researchers' work provides critical data for understanding environmental shifts, though the implications for marine ecosystems and weather patterns remain a focus for further study.

No specific causes beyond established climate trends are detailed in the findings, but the consistency of rising heat year after year points to sustained atmospheric influences.

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The World Meteorological Organization has added the Earth's energy imbalance as a new key indicator in its latest climate report, highlighting how oceans absorb most excess heat. This measure underscores the ongoing warming trend despite yearly temperature fluctuations. The report warns of impacts on food systems from ocean heating and sea level rise.

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A new analysis in Geophysical Research Letters shows Earth warming at ~0.36°C per decade since 2014—about double the prior rate of 0.18°C per decade—with 98% confidence after accounting for natural factors. Led by Stefan Rahmstorf, the study warns the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C limit could be breached by 2028, amid debates over short-term trends and data uncertainties.

Researchers at the University of Tokyo have created an ensemble of eight climate models to trace water circulation worldwide using isotopic fingerprints. This method combines data on heavier hydrogen and oxygen atoms that shift predictably as water evaporates and travels through the atmosphere. The approach improves understanding of extreme weather and climate change impacts.

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A new study warns that a shutdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) would trigger the release of up to 640 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the deep Southern Ocean near Antarctica. This feedback effect could raise global temperatures by an additional 0.2°C. Researchers at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research highlight the risk as humanity's emissions continue to weaken the key ocean current.

 

 

 

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