WMO includes Earth's energy imbalance in key climate indicators

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.

The World Meteorological Organization, or WMO, released its latest report on Sunday, tracking essential climate indicators such as atmospheric carbon dioxide and global temperatures. For the first time, it incorporated the Earth's energy imbalance, or EEI, defined as the difference between solar energy absorbed by the planet and energy radiated back to space. John Kennedy, lead author and scientific coordinator, stated that EEI represents 'fundamentally what climate change is.' He added, 'As long as that energy imbalance is there, the Earth will keep on warming, ice will continue to melt, and the sea level will continue to rise.' Kennedy noted that air temperature variations from El Niño and La Niña can obscure long-term warming trends tracked by surface temperatures alone. EEI provides context for other indicators like sea level rise and glacier melt. The report reveals that oceans absorb 91 percent of excess energy accumulated since the 1960s due to the greenhouse gas effect, with records set in each of the last nine years. This ocean heat buildup threatens food production through coral bleaching, habitat loss, reduced fish catches, coastal erosion from sea level rise, and flooding from glacier melt that disrupts farming. Jennifer Jacquet, a professor at the University of Miami, praised the WMO's focus on oceans, calling them 'carbon sponges' with limits that have masked climate progress. She cited a 2016 incident in Chile where farmed Atlantic salmon died amid an algae bloom during a marine heat wave. Jacquet observed that warming drives wild fish toward polar regions, harming equatorial fishers and heightening food insecurity. 'The oceans are reaching their limit of what they can do to help offset anthropogenic changes,' she said.

Makala yanayohusiana

Earth's oceans reached their highest heat levels on record in 2025, absorbing 23 zetta joules of excess energy. This milestone, confirmed by an international team of scientists, underscores the accelerating impact of climate change. The warming trend, building since the 1990s, fuels stronger storms and rising sea levels worldwide.

Imeripotiwa na AI

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 new study indicates that the Arctic will retain about 1.5°C of warming and excess precipitation even if atmospheric carbon dioxide returns to pre-industrial levels. Researchers used multiple climate models to predict these irreversible changes, driven largely by ocean heat absorption. This highlights the challenges of reversing regional climate impacts through carbon dioxide removal efforts.

Imeripotiwa na AI

New studies indicate that stronger winds and warming deep ocean water have triggered a sharp decline in Antarctic sea ice since 2016. Previously expanding, the ice reached a record high in 2014 before plummeting to record lows. Researchers link this shift to wind-driven upwelling of circumpolar deep water.

Jumatatu, 16. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 17:05:29

Scientists debate causes of accelerating global warming

Ijumaa, 6. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 09:46:24

Study finds global warming rate has doubled since mid-2010s

Jumatano, 4. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 17:04:14

Sea levels worldwide underestimated due to research oversight

Jumanne, 24. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 11:09:59

Space lasers reveal accelerating global sea level rise

Jumapili, 15. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 05:56:26

Scientists develop ensemble model for tracking global water isotopes

Jumatano, 4. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 23:09:51

Melting Antarctic ice may weaken Southern Ocean carbon sink

Jumatatu, 12. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 10:24:27

Climate risk becomes defining economic issue

Jumanne, 6. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 11:26:43

2025 confirmed as second-hottest year on record

Jumatano, 31. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 09:46:42

WMO sees 55 percent chance of weak La Niña in Q1 2026

Jumatatu, 29. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 23:44:16

Earth nears environmental tipping point with record emissions

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa