Ocean temperatures to rise four times more quickly in next 40 years, warn US and Chinese scientists
- Last year was hottest on record for ocean temperatures, raising risk of natural disasters and higher sea levels
The oceans are warming up much faster than scientists had previously predicted, substantially raising the risks and magnitude of natural disasters, a team of international researchers has warned.
Last year was the hottest on record for seawater, which is absorbing more than 90 per cent of the heat generated by human activity.
In the next four decades, sea temperatures will rise four times more rapidly than they did in the previous six decades.
Rapid ocean warming could lead to rising sea level rises, threaten coastal infrastructure with more intense storms, and gravely affect the global fishing industry.
“The increase in ocean heat will affect the planet’s weather systems by raising the air temperatures and supplying more moisture. Warmer air can hold more moisture – about seven per cent more per degree of Celsius,” said Cheng Lijing, lead author on the study and an environmental scientist with the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.