'The human fingerprint is everywhere': pioneering Hadley climate centre turns 30

Exclusively compiled data from centre’s supercomputer shows alarming climate trajectory

The human fingerprint on the climate is now unmistakable and will become increasingly evident over the coming decades, the UK Met Office has confirmed after 30 years of pioneering study.

Since the 1990s, global temperatures have warmed by half a degree, Arctic sea ice has shrunk by almost 2 million km2, sea-levels have risen by about 10cm and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased by 60 parts per million (17%), according to figures exclusively compiled for the Guardian to mark the 30th anniversary of the Met Office’s Hadley Centre for climate science and services.

Continue reading...

from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3c3dnZ9

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

‘Help us or LSO fails’: Sir Simon Rattle’s plea over Covid and Brexit

Mark Kermode’s best films of 2019

The Glasgow Effect: examining the city's life expectancy gap – a photo essay