Workers transport large bunches of bananas across the market loading area under the scorching sunlight at Koyambedu Market, Chennai (Photo by McKay Savage/Wikimedia Commons)
A recent UN report has suggested that the next five years could be the hottest on record as global temperatures rise above the 1.5-degree Celsius limit.
The new update released by World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) discusses the upcoming El Nino, combined with heat-trapping greenhouse gases, which will result in global temperatures between the years 2023 and 2027 rise to over 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels for at least one year.
Pre-industrial levels are the level of temperature at any period before the industrial revolution. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) special report uses the reference period 1850–1900 to represent pre-industrial temperature.
The average global temperature in 2022 was about 1.15°C above the 1850-1900 average. The cooling influence of La Niña conditions over much of the past three years temporarily reined in the longer-term warming trend. But La Niña ended in March 2023, and an El Niño is forecast to develop in the coming months. Typically, an El Niño increases global temperatures in the year after it grows – in this case, this would be 2024, the WMO report said.
Dr. Leon Hermanson, the lead of the report and a Met Office expert scientist, said, “Global mean temperatures are predicted to continue increasing, moving us further and further away from the climate we are used to.”
The report also talks about the changing temperatures in the Arctic. “Arctic warming is disproportionately high. Compared to the 1991-2020 average, the temperature anomaly is predicted to be more than three times as large as the global mean anomaly when averaged over the next five northern hemisphere extended winters,” it says.
Past studies have shown that warm and cold climatic conditions in the Arctic have led to erratic monsoon patterns in India. A climate reconstruction study found that warm Arctic conditions were linked to intense rainfall over the Indian subcontinent, while cold conditions in the Arctic were associated with weak spells of rain over the Indian subcontinent over the past 1,000 years.
What It Means For India
India is experiencing an increasing frequency and duration of heatwaves because of global warming. And with the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) coming in, the period of heatwaves is expected to be longer.
“The findings of the WMO update can be highly correlated with the current occurrence of heatwaves across India. 2023 is the second year in a row that India has witnessed untimely heatwaves. After recording the warmest March last year, this year India recorded its warmest February since records began in the early 1900s,” said Vishwas Chitale, Senior Programme Lead at Council on Energy, Environment and Water.