"Missing" global heat may
hide in deep oceans
By Reuters
The mystery of
Earth's missing heat may have been solved: it could lurk deep in oceans,
temporarily masking the climate-warming effects of greenhouse gas emissions,
researchers reported on Sunday.
Climate
scientists have long wondered where this so-called missing heat was going,
especially over the last decade, when greenhouse emissions kept increasing but
world air temperatures did not rise correspondingly.
The
build-up of energy and heat in Earth's system is important to track because of
its bearing on current weather and future climate.
The
temperatures were still high -- the decade between 2000 and 2010 was Earth's
warmest in more than a century -- but the single-year mark for warmest global
temperature was stuck at 1998, until 2010 matched it.
The
world temperature should have risen more than it did, scientists at the
National Center for Atmospheric Research reckoned.
They
knew greenhouse gas emissions were rising during the decade and satellites
showed there was a growing gap between how much sunlight was coming in and how
much radiation was going out. Some heat was coming to Earth but not leaving,
and yet temperatures were not going up as much as projected.
So
where did the missing heat go?
Computer
simulations suggest most of it was trapped in layers of oceans deeper than
1,000 feet during periods like the last decade when air temperatures failed to
warm as much as they might have.
This
could happen for years at a time, and it could happen periodically this
century, even as the overall warming trend continues, the researchers reported
in the journal Nature Climate Change.
"This
study suggests the missing energy has indeed been buried in the ocean,"
NCAR's Kevin Trenberth, a co-author of the study, said in a statement.
"The heat has not disappeared and so it cannot be ignored. It must have
consequences."
Trenberth
and the other researchers ran five computer simulations of global temperatures,
taking into account the interactions between the atmosphere, land, oceans and
sea ice, and basing the simulations on projected human-generated greenhouse gas
emissions.
These
simulations all indicated global temperature would rise several degrees this
century. But all of them also showed periods when temperatures would stabilize
before rising. During these periods, the extra heat moved into deep ocean water
due to changes in ocean circulation, the scientists said.
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