时间:2026-04-08 14:30:47 来源:网络整理编辑:時尚
Climate 101 is a Mashable series that answers provoking and salient questions about Earth’s wa
Climate 101 is a Mashable series that answers provoking and salient questions about Earth’s warming climate.
Top U.S. earth scientists announced Thursday that 2021 was among the hottest years on record.
Specifically, the average global surface temperature was the sixth warmest, according to both NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), making the last eight years the eight warmest in over 140 years of reliable record-keeping. Temperatures in 2021 were nearly 2 degrees Fahrenheit (about 1.1 Celsius) hotter than average temperatures in the late 19th century. Crucially, however, climate scientists emphasize it's the long-term temperature trend that really matters and best illustrates how global surface temperatures are changing, rather than what occurs during a particular year or group of years.
And the decades-long trend is unambiguous. Temperatures have been on an upward trajectory for nearly half a century.

"It is the long-term effects on climate that we're really worried about," Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist and researcher at the environmental science organization Berkeley Earth, told Mashable. "It is crystal clear that temperatures are going up, and they're going up quickly."
(Matching NASA and NOAA's temperature analysis, Berkeley Earth also independently found that 2021 was the sixth warmest on record.)
Average global surface temperatures since 1880Credit: NASATweet may have been deleted
Amid the rising global temperature trend there are small bumps, like little peaks and valleys. This is due to recurring, short-term climate patterns impacting the larger warming signal. The most influential of the patterns occur in the sprawling Pacific Ocean, which can see year-to-year periods of sea surface warming (El Niño) or cooling (La Niña). This temporarily pushes overall global temperatures up or down. That's why the decades-long story is crucial to watch. It cuts through the noise.
"It is crystal clear that temperatures are going up, and they're going up quickly."
"We live on a dynamic planet with lots of daily, weekly, monthly, and annual fluctuations," emphasized Sarah Green, an environmental chemist at Michigan Technological University who had no involvement with the 2021 climate reports. "If you're looking for long-term changes, you have to average over the long term."
"The focus on short-term variability is not really helpful," agreed Hausfather.
In 2021, La Niña conditions in the Pacific Ocean had a cooling effect on Earth. But even so, the human impact on our climate remains outsized. To illustrate, 2021 makes 1998 look like an unusually cool year. But 1998 was "crazy warm" at the time, noted Hausfather, as the warming trend was enhanced by a potent El Niño event in the Pacific Ocean.
Tweet may have been deleted
Today's relentlessly rising temperatures are no surprise. Large-scale human activities, primarily the burning of fossil fuels refined from ancient, carbon-rich, decomposed creatures, have driven momentous changes in the atmosphere. For example, levels of the most important greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, are now the highest they've been in some 3 million years, and are still rising. Each passing year, humanity emits prodigious amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.
With current carbon-cutting commitments from global nations, the world is on track to warm by some 2.7 C (nearly 5 F), which would have extreme, disastrous environmental consequences. Already, the consequences of warming are serious. For example:
Extreme fires:Increased temperatures and dryness parch vegetation and allow wildfires to burn more rapidly, significantly contributing to unnatural infernosand extreme urban firestorms. ("It takes just a little bit of warming to lead to a lot more burning.")
Severe deluges: A warmer climate allows the atmosphere to hold more water. This boosts the odds for more severe and record-breaking deluges.
Destabilized ice sheets: Warmer ocean waters have destabilized the Florida-sized Thwaites Glacier. It's receding back; if it collapses it can ultimately raise sea levels in the coming centuries by many feet.
Ocean heating: The ocean absorbs over 90 percent of the heat humanity traps on Earth. That's a nearly unfathomable number. This portends continued sea level rise, great disruptions to animal life, and beyond. Ocean heat hit a record high in 2021.
More vector-borne disease: As the climate warms, creatures that infect us with pathogens (vectors like mosquitoes and ticks) spread.
Tweet may have been deleted
The impacts of climate change will only grow until nations drop carbon emissions to around zero. But with each passing year, efforts to limit warming to some 2 C (3.6 F) above 19th-century levels grow more daunting. The big solutions, however, like the vast expansion of powerful ocean wind farmsand electric vehicle adoption, are well-known.
"The more you delay, the harder it is," said Green.
Whyd voice2026-04-08 14:09
廣州隊主帥:對球隊防守端表現不滿意 特別是第二落點2026-04-08 13:44
李磊:上輪複出身體沒百分百康複 但球隊需要就要付出全部2026-04-08 13:43
揭秘曼聯新帥滕哈格:最像瓜帥的光頭 訓練強迫症患者2026-04-08 13:20
Felix the cat just raised £5000 for charity because she's the hero we all need2026-04-08 13:14
大邱主帥 :已經知道山東是什麽樣的球隊 一定能拿3分2026-04-08 13:14
廣州隊VS蔚山現代首發 :何立攀門將 延續541防守陣型2026-04-08 13:06
廣州隊主帥 :看到球隊進步的跡象 希望能夠創造驚喜2026-04-08 12:27
Singapore rolls out video2026-04-08 11:59
滕哈格視埃裏克森為首要目標 賈府妖星請纓投曼聯2026-04-08 11:47
Olympics official on Rio's green diving pool: 'Chemistry is not an exact science'2026-04-08 14:05
搶戲?博格巴賽中發文回懟朗尼克:我的賽季未結束2026-04-08 13:59
泰山完成亞冠進球小目標 接下來還差“贏一場”2026-04-08 13:50
曝大連是中超唯一確定了的賽區 日照可能性不大2026-04-08 13:48
5 people Tim Cook calls for advice on running the biggest company in the world2026-04-08 13:06
德國杯歐冠先後出局 拜仁德甲十連冠是完美結局安慰劑2026-04-08 12:58
拜仁總監:萊萬今夏不會離隊 巴薩出5000萬也不放2026-04-08 12:47
迷惑!曼聯獲點球竟非C羅主罰 B費一腳踢丟扳平球2026-04-08 12:42
MashReads Podcast: What makes a good summer read?2026-04-08 12:41
教育部 :探索女子足球人才培養“一條龍”模式2026-04-08 11:50