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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U.S. map illustration highlighting uneven state warming: hotter highs in West, warmer lows in North, contrasting averages and extremes.
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Study finds most U.S. states are warming in uneven ways that averages can miss

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A study in PLOS Climate reports that U.S. warming trends vary sharply by state and by whether researchers look at temperature averages or extremes. Using data from 1950 to 2021 for the 48 contiguous states, the authors found that 27 states showed statistically significant increases in average temperature, while 41 showed warming in at least one part of their temperature range—such as hotter highs in parts of the West and warmer cold-season lows in parts of the North.

James Hansen, a prominent climate scientist at Columbia University, has predicted that 2026 will become the hottest year on record, surpassing 2024 due to accelerating global warming and an impending super El Niño. He argues that current sea surface temperatures support this forecast despite ongoing La Niña cooling. Other experts urge caution amid forecast uncertainties.

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Scientists analyzing ancient ice from Antarctica have found that ocean temperatures dropped by 2 to 2.5 degrees Celsius over the past 3 million years, while carbon dioxide and methane levels changed only modestly. The studies, led by researchers from Oregon State University and others, suggest factors beyond greenhouse gases drove much of Earth's long-term cooling. The findings come from ice cores at Allan Hills in East Antarctica.

Researchers at the University of Rochester have identified a key mechanism for methane production in the open ocean, driven by phosphate scarcity. The discovery, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests warming oceans could boost these emissions, creating a potential climate feedback loop. This resolves a long-standing puzzle about methane in oxygen-rich surface waters.

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A patch of cooling ocean south-east of Greenland, known as the cold blob, is likely caused by a slowdown in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, according to new research. The findings add to concerns about potential future climate impacts in Europe and beyond. Scientists remain divided on the exact causes.

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