The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: At +2.0°C above Preindustrial Conditions Are We Committed to 40 Feet of Sea Rise?
Dear Diary. Looking at global warming trends, especially given what has happened in 2023, it looks like the world will blow by the +1.5°C above preindustrial conditions threshold and stay there for many decades to come, if not starting in 2024 as suggested by James Hansen, probably during the early 2030s. Yesterday I spied one more reason why we dare not approach the +2.0°C line in the climate sand. It’s very bad news.
Our little planet is now at 1.90°C above the 1850-1900 IPCC baseline.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) November 17, 2023
The record high anomaly this year is 1.91°C, on September 22.
Tomorrow? pic.twitter.com/gF2Vn0rozO
New science has come out that even if we limit global warming to near +2.0°C above preindustrial conditions, there will be approximately 40 feet of sea level rise. Obviously, if seas get that high all of our coastal cities will be swamped, and will have to be rebuild well inland, causing un unfathomable amount of social upheaval and unrest.
Here are more details from NBC news:
“Many ice sheet scientists now believe that by 2°C, nearly all of Greenland, much of West Antarctica, and even vulnerable portions of East Antarctica will be triggered to very long-term, inexorable sea-level rise, even if air temperatures later decrease” https://t.co/O2BhIaMURv
— Rocky Kistner (@therockyfiles) November 17, 2023
2 degrees, 40 feet: Scientists who study Earth’s ice say we could be committed to disastrous sea level rise
A new report details that ice sheets are melting quicker than expected and that the world will need to ramp up its climate efforts to avert disastrous sea level rise.
Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier has the potential to add several inches to global sea levels.James Yungel / NASA file
Nov. 16, 2023, 11:02 AM EST
By Evan Bush
Top scientists say the world’s ice sheets are melting more rapidly than expected and that world leaders must ramp up their climate ambitions to avoid a catastrophic rise in sea levels.
A report released Thursday from the International Cryosphere Climate Initiative, a network of policy experts and researchers, pleads with world leaders to heed their warnings as they gather for the United Nations’ COP28 climate conference later this month. The report says if global average temperatures settle at 2 degrees Celsius above the preindustrial baseline, the planet could be committed to more than 40 feet of sea-level rise — a melt that would take centuries and reshape societies across the globe.
The collapse of ice sheets and ice shelves has been a major point of uncertainty within the climate science community. But a flurry of new research suggests that dangerous tipping points are nearer than once thought and that there is likely less room in Earth’s carbon budget than expected.
“We might be reaching these temperature thresholds that we’ve been talking about for a long time sooner than we were thinking about years ago,” said Rob DeConto, the director of the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Earth & Sustainability and an author of the report. “And it may be that the thresholds for some of these processes that can drive really rapid ice loss are lower than we were thinking just a few years ago.”
Without a dramatic turn in the pace of climate action, those factors could leave humanity “facing rates of sea-level rise way outside the range of adaptability,” DeConto said.
In the report, the scientists argue a rise in global temperatures of 2 degrees Celsius would force many to flee coastal communities.
“We’re displacing millions of people with the decisions being made now,” said report author Julie Brigham-Grette, a geosciences professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
More than 60 scientists contributed to the report. Many are experts in their specialties, and some have worked on past reports for the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s leading body on assessing the climate crisis.
In the IPCC’s 2021 report, scientists estimated that sea level will rise about 0.9 to 3.3 feet (0.28 to 1.01 meters) by 2100, but also said those numbers didn’t factor in uncertainties around ice sheets like the ones scientists have been probing more deeply in the past few years.
New studies suggest that melting ice sheets are a greater cause for concern than the IPCC had considered.
“Many ice sheet scientists now believe that by 2°C, nearly all of Greenland, much of West Antarctica, and even vulnerable portions of East Antarctica will be triggered to very long-term, inexorable sea-level rise, even if air temperatures later decrease,” the new ICCI report says.
The new report also outlines how the declining mass of mountain glaciers threatens hydropower supplies and endangers drinking water sources, how permafrost could intensify warming by releasing massive amounts of methane, and how polar waters are becoming increasingly acidified, which threatens the survival of shell-building creatures like krill and crab.
World leaders in 2015 agreed to limit warming to well below 2 degrees C and also to aim for 1.5 degrees. But many countries are struggling to cut fossil fuels from their economies, and efforts remain off pace to limit warming. A 2022 U.N. report found the planet was on track to warm about 2.8 C above preindustrial times by 2100.
A recent United Nations Environment Programme report found that world leaders plan to extract and produce twice the amount of fossil fuels needed to keep global temperatures from exceeding 1.5 degrees C.
This year, scientists have observed a slew of concerning signs for the world’s ice.
Antarctic sea ice reached its lowest-ever maximum since scientists began measuring in 1979, a possible sign that climate change could be making an impact in what has been a more resilient region for sea ice.
Swiss glaciers lost about 10% of their remaining mass in the past two years, the report says. And Greenland experienced the second-highest surface melt in recorded history.
Meanwhile, scientists revealed new research that suggests the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet might already be inevitable and that Greenland’s glaciers are melting at five times the rate they were 20 years ago. And another group of scientists found that the remaining carbon budget to limit warming was far smaller than once thought. At the current pace, the scientists believe global average temperatures will reach 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels in about six years.
The authors hope the new ICCI report will influence negotiations at COP28, the climate discussions among world leaders that are slated to take place in Dubai from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12.
“We’re committing today’s kindergartners to a very different future,” Brigham-Grette said, adding that policymakers’ “selective hearing is the problem.”
Added DeConto: “While some change has already been set in motion, the truly dire impacts of cryosphere loss can be avoided with immediate reductions in carbon emissions.”
Evan Bush Evan Bush is a science reporter for NBC News. He can be reached at Evan.Bush@nbcuni.com.
More:
Earth facing dire sea level rise — up to 20m — even if climate goals met – Global News https://t.co/gbypRqCH41
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) November 17, 2023
Warming of 2°C would trigger ‘catastrophic’ loss of world’s ice, new report says
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) November 18, 2023
This would commit world to “between 12 and 20 metres” of sea level rise
Even holding global warming of 2°C would also not be enough to “prevent extensive permafrost thaw”https://t.co/JDo7Mn46A4
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
Another brutally hot day in South America with over 43C in Brazil,Bolivia and Paraguay.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 16, 2023
43.5 Puerto Suarez 🇧🇴 all time high beaten again
43.4C Porto Murtinho 🇧🇷 all time high tied (it was set last month)
Next 2 days will be the worst of the worst.
Don't miss the updates. pic.twitter.com/7jzfxHT05n
More crazy records for South America:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
BOLIVIA
MIN temp. 30.3C San Jose de Chiquitos
HIGHT MIN TEMP. in Bolivian history -beaten again
BRAZIL
MIN. temp. 32.4C Porto Murtinho
Today and tomorrow will be insane days with many records: Stay tuned for the updates here… https://t.co/2ynRcCLgzP
🌊 Rio do Sul in #Brazil underwater again 😩pic.twitter.com/xSKuwxEY6t
— Volcaholic 🌋 (@volcaholic1) November 17, 2023
Insane November warmth in Central Asia
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
31C Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan
27.3C in Kazakhstan at 600m asl
26.5C in Tajikistan at 1015m asl
Even more shocking the night warmth
21.1C TMIN ar Saragt in Turkmenistan
19.5C at Turkmenbat highest in November
Unprecedented warmth pic.twitter.com/UpciWouqhs
Exceptional warmth in Central Asia:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
Some temperatures recorded these days are up to 31.5C in Turkmenistan, 30.2C in Uzbekistan and 25.4C in Kazakhstan.
The warmth will be persistent but will gradually move east to Tajikistan,Mongolia,Siberia and China. https://t.co/pMrxJBl7SS
While very low temperatures persists in parts of Antarctic Plateau, exceptional and unprecedented warmth for November is sweeping other areas of Antartica.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
Some examples:
+7.8C Maitri 🇮🇳
+5.6C Novolazarevskaja 🇷🇺
+4.1C Sanae 🇿🇦
+3.1C Troll 🇳🇴 lat72S ,1290m asl ! Spectacular https://t.co/H0X6qkHroC pic.twitter.com/khcEDHBi5y
Today 16 November no Lower 48 USA station rose above 84F but no station had a Tmin lower than +16F.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
The spread within the whole Continental USA in the whole day was just 68F which is unusually low and rare.
Tomorrow Southern Texas will be hotter (86/88F).
Screenshot from WPC/NOAA pic.twitter.com/ROtFDxnuOw
Here is some new October and November 2023 climatology:
October 2023 in #Mexico 🇲🇽 had an average temperature of 23.6C,+1.7C above normal and was THE WARMEST on records
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 16, 2023
Last 5 months in Mexico:
-Hottest June
-Hottest July
-Hottest August
-Hottest September
-Hottest October
Hundreds of records were beaten in each month.
Maps by Conagua pic.twitter.com/Z34aMjhVuA
October 2023 in #Kazakhstan was warm and wet:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
Temperature anomalies ranged from +0.5C in the Northwest to +3.6C in the Southeast,where it was the warmest on record.
Rainfalls were between 2 and 3 times the average.
See temperatures and rainfalls anomalies map by Kazakh Hydromet. pic.twitter.com/YZ7nSMOMlr
France just went through its wettest 30-day period on record. Nationally-averaged rainfall total between October 18 and November 16 was an incredible 237 mm (9.3 inches). This comes after the country experienced its driest first half of October on record. Just absurd. pic.twitter.com/8WhumG9csd
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) November 17, 2023
October 2023 in #Barbados was another hot month.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 17, 2023
At Charnocks the average temperature was 28.8C which is +1.05C above normal
During the month Barbados recorded the highest temperature in its climatic history with 35.6C at St James,tying the same temp. at the end of September. pic.twitter.com/lgEAAsIHOh
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Friday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
Around 7.3 billion people faced temperatures strongly influenced by global warming over the past year.https://t.co/lGHUBLfXxs
— Vanessa Nakate (@vanessa_vash) November 17, 2023
Brazil's summer is still a month away–but temps are already crashing records.
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) November 17, 2023
The 'feels like' temperature in Rio yesterday was 137 degrees. Millions there live in un-airconditioned favelashttps://t.co/X3DXr3TLuS
Temperatures in #RiodeJaneiro #Brazil have been off the charts for springtime. High humidity, In this part of the globe – getting very close to wet bulb temperatures, which are once again pushing the boundaries of human survival. Could Rio be 1 of the 1st major cities impacted? pic.twitter.com/FvOsiU7UUr
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) November 17, 2023
The Earth's Energy Imbalance is now higher than it has ever been in the past 150,000 years.
— Leon Simons (@LeonSimons8) November 17, 2023
It used to peak when the AMOC slowed down.
What if (when?) the AMOC slows down again, and we don't manage to reduce greenhouse gases?
What if we keep rapidly increasing the net forcing? https://t.co/16UqCArBvP pic.twitter.com/rRy0tgBGAW
Yet more confirmation that climate change is having a planetary-scale impact: “Global warming puts increased energy in the atmosphere, resulting in stronger storms with intensified winds that generate increased wave heights” https://t.co/SxbkVjs7T4
— Jonathan Overpeck (@GreatLakesPeck) November 17, 2023
In case you have had your head in the sand for the last 30 years, CO2 & CH4 concentrations are at record levels & still growing at record pace…
— Glen Peters (@Peters_Glen) November 17, 2023
Oh, but don't worry, 90% of the world has a net zero pledge, or something, blah, blah, blah, …https://t.co/YJYNPyb0L1 pic.twitter.com/gn892xfx80
The climate crisis is a food crisis.
— Vanessa Nakate (@vanessa_vash) November 17, 2023
And the food crisis is a humanitarian crisis.
There is no climate justice without ensuring that there is food justice. https://t.co/wUqAQgLvi6
Your 'moment of doom' for Nov. 17, 2023 ~ 'Doom loop' revisited.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) November 17, 2023
"The wildfire increase is concentrated in the boreal forests of Siberia, Canada and Alaska… and is set to unleash the huge volumes of carbon locked in the Arctic permafrost for centuries."https://t.co/w3nKoeO4xl
Methane (CH₄) is a potent greenhouse gas. Here are the most recent monthly observations…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) November 18, 2023
July 2023 – 1915.3 ppb
July 2022 – 1904.4 ppb
+ Data (@NOAA_ESRL): https://t.co/lBobVqZpue
+ More info on trends: https://t.co/UIMDzbWiqk pic.twitter.com/jx4iG04NdN
In today’s @latimes: My conversation with climate scientist @Weather_West, who says we need to start paying experts to educate the public on the world’s biggest crisis instead of expecting them to do it for free: https://t.co/6VsvaVkVoE pic.twitter.com/URwELE6BRT
— Sammy Roth (@Sammy_Roth) November 17, 2023
Climate change has become very visible in Scotland.
— Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) November 17, 2023
Adapting to climate change is hard.
Especially as climate change was not actually considered in 2011 when they designed the flood defences for a 1-in-200 year event.
They were overwhelmed in 2023.https://t.co/uJom7gOE7x
Most people have never heard of "black carbon" — but it's a powerful levers to address climate change and health human.
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) November 17, 2023
Reducing black carbon is a win-win for people and the planet, preventing climate change and millions of deaths. #ReduceBlackCarbonhttps://t.co/G2nSoWeLID
John Vaillant wins @BaillieGifford nonfiction prize with ‘highly relevant’ work on #wildfires #canpoli #BGPrize2023 #ClimateEmergency https://t.co/sBbq0J3rwu
— John Vaillant (@JohnVaillant) November 17, 2023
Jury clears climate protesters causing damage HSBC HQ
— Roger Hallam (@RogerHallamCS21) November 17, 2023
“It’s tragically surreal .. when the justice system agrees we’re totally fucked but has nothing to say about the cause, the remedy, the victims or the perpetrators." @ClareTotty
It's also treasonous.https://t.co/HhTDBw6OCw
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
“Portugal just ran on 100% renewables for six days in a row
— Green News Report (@GreenNewsReport) November 17, 2023
For nearly a week, the country of 10 million met customer needs with wind, hydro and solar — a test run for operating the grid without fossil fuels”#ClimateCrisis #ClimateAction https://t.co/EQv3bpXTqC
'Solar energy could power all health facilities in poorer countries and save lives, experts say.'https://t.co/bd3pdXkX64
— Dr Paul Dorfman (@dorfman_p) November 17, 2023
The Biden Administration is bringing HEAT PUMP MANUFACTURING to America with $169 million of investments across 15 projects. Let's GO!!!!!!!!
— Dr. Leah C. Stokes (@leahstokes) November 17, 2023
Proud to have played a small role in making this happen alongside the brilliant folks @rewiringamerica! https://t.co/Qz4SG16Msz pic.twitter.com/BNlMgnrjor
A great leader of one of the most important fights in the world right now! https://t.co/gWwD3I1cOF
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) November 18, 2023
This whirlpool can power 300 homes, and fish can swim straight through it unharmed.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) November 17, 2023
We have so many solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate#climate #energy #renewables #go100re pic.twitter.com/1Ju2T5suis
2,000 MW of solar PV, built at an average rate of 10 MW per day!
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) November 18, 2023
Will probably produce around 4 TWh per year, at a very low cost, claimed to be $0.0132 per kWh (but @solar_chase always warns us that these auction prices aren't real costs ;). https://t.co/AifF9PBiVX
More from the Weather Department:
Extensive damage from coastal flooding and wind in Miami area from the recent mesoscale convective system pic.twitter.com/1aC8HM8dBD
— Reed Timmer, PhD (@ReedTimmerAccu) November 17, 2023
Trying out a different visualization for the excessive rainfall in South Florida on Wednesday night – reflectivity loop of the event, highlighting the multiple meso lows, combined with total radar-estimated rainfall starting on Wednesday afternoon: pic.twitter.com/iyCaade5i1
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) November 17, 2023
Rainfall totals these past couple days for the Florida peninsula (estimates based on radar). What did you get? https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/JWct6L5lss
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) November 17, 2023
PTC22 is elongated and disorganized this morning. As noted in the NHC discussion, I think there's a chance this doesn't organize into a TC before getting elongated and strung out into the trough as it lifts to the northeast. Heavy rain will be the main threat either way. pic.twitter.com/KsNpItt7pA
— Andy Hazelton (@AndyHazelton) November 17, 2023
What @mattlanza said! https://t.co/d2PJn5qyqu
— Bob Henson (@bhensonweather) November 17, 2023
Yesterday, @NOAA's #GOESEast 🛰️ captured imagery of smoke plumes and heat signatures from wildfires throughout the central Appalachians. Parts of the region are under a moderate-to-severe drought, with an extreme drought ongoing in parts of Virginia, where the #MattsCreekFire is… pic.twitter.com/Su31CuVJGy
— NOAA Satellites (@NOAASatellites) November 17, 2023
Latest EURO Ens. precip. shows Tue/Wed low that will move from southern Plains to New England could distribute widespread inch plus rainfall totals to areas that have been extremely dry this fall and have fallen rapidly into drought like the TN Valley and Carolinas.… pic.twitter.com/QHyDtPpSzT
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) November 17, 2023
Thanksgiving-pocalypse. After our brief cool down this weekend, deep southerly lasting for two weeks or more. Not impossible that most of our snow in Anchorage disappears by the end of the month. pic.twitter.com/MW9gh4YncC
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) November 16, 2023
With leftover COLD and potential ramp up of low pressure as it leaves New England Wednesday, 22November, FROZEN precip may become an issue as early as Tuesday night for this region. Best SNOW chances at this time appear north off the Mass Pike, but its very early in the game.… pic.twitter.com/xKdViMshWQ
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) November 17, 2023
Looking at just "Strong" El Ninos (≥+1.5C ONI), here's home many of them had a Dec-Feb period that were warmer than their own 30-year centered normal. pic.twitter.com/f0sFsHU0iU
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) November 17, 2023
*VERY RARE CLOUD* spotted in Southwest Florida recently! This type of "horseshoe cloud" over North Fort Myers forms from horizontal spin in the atmosphere. Think of it as a sideways funnel cloud! Then rising air causes part of the funnel to lift, creating the horseshoe shape you… pic.twitter.com/ySlp62kGRa
— Matt Devitt (@MattDevittWX) November 17, 2023
More on the Environment and Nature:
EU criminalises environmental damage ‘comparable to ecocide’ https://t.co/7M3PA0tSzU
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) November 17, 2023
45.1% of respondents had never heard of PFAS and did not know what they are, and 31.6% responded that they had heard of PFAS but did not know what they are.
— Doomer Girl News🐀 (@SaraHor76174949) November 17, 2023
97.4% did not believe their drinking water had been impacted by PFAS.
We are doomed.https://t.co/G5KtBD0KqX pic.twitter.com/GDD7LPXdtP
Diver Rich Horner swimming through a sea of plastic waste in Bali. This is the world we are creating.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) November 17, 2023
Nature is amazing. Protect it.#EndSingleUse #plasticpollution #plastictreaty #oceans #climate #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/V3wtU9zXup
EU agrees to ban exports of waste plastic to poor countries https://t.co/Wo25HT5z2b
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) November 17, 2023
The insects are almost gone
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) November 17, 2023
70% of wildlife gone in just 50 years
Billions of birds gone
Nature is being eradicated
Humans so detached from nature, they still arrogantly think they will not be next and can continue to wage war on nature – assuming they can survive without nature https://t.co/vPGTl7pQo8
A cocktail of toxins is poisoning our fields. Its effect on humans? Nobody can tell us | George Monbiot https://t.co/MayZiU5AO1
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) November 18, 2023
A cocktail of toxins is poisoning our fields. Its effect on humans? Nobody can tell us | George Monbiot https://t.co/MayZiU5AO1
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) November 18, 2023
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
📡It’s time to set the PACE for our next launch!
— NASA's Launch Services Program (@NASA_LSP) November 17, 2023
The Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, and ocean Ecosystem spacecraft arrived at the Astrotech Space Operations Facility near NASA's Kennedy Space Center for processing.
🚀Liftoff is targeted for early next year on a SpaceX Falcon 9. pic.twitter.com/ldL5ZoMd1z
Göbekli Tepe is a Neolithic settlement inhabited from c. 9500 to at least 8000 BCE, in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey.
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) November 17, 2023
Its structures are therefore 11,000 years old, or more, 6,000 years before Stonehenge and the great pyramids of Giza, making them humanity's oldest… pic.twitter.com/QJp9FoXOMT
Bees generally can’t fly at night, they use the sun as a compass. Even if the sun is behind clouds, bees can infer it’s position using patterns of polarised light
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) November 17, 2023
So they may sleep in flowers, many blossoms close up at night, creating a warm space
pic.twitter.com/mKgwNRhxC2
heavy snowfall at Sequoia National Park, California
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) November 17, 2023
📹 Michael Block/ mblockk
pic.twitter.com/PCglZnndLh
The Biden Administration is bringing HEAT PUMP MANUFACTURING to America with $169 million of investments across 15 projects. Let's GO!!!!!!!!
— Dr. Leah C. Stokes (@leahstokes) November 17, 2023
Proud to have played a small role in making this happen alongside the brilliant folks @rewiringamerica! https://t.co/Qz4SG16Msz pic.twitter.com/BNlMgnrjor