Page 26 - bne IntelliNews monthly magazine September 2024
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26 I Companies & Markets bne September 2024
Antarctic temperatures rise 28 degrees Celsius above normal
Roberta Harrington in Los Angeles
Antarctica is enduring an alarming second heat wave in two years. Ground temperatures in the east of the continent surged over 50 degrees Fahrenheit (28 Celsius) above average. The heatwave could last until mid-August, highlighting how frequent such temperature spikes could become because of the climate crisis.
“This heat wave is a near-record (or record) event for the region of Antarctica it’s having the biggest impact on,” Edward Blanchard, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Washington, told the Washington Post.
“The heatwave’s large footprint is also remarkable,”
as it makes up most of the continent.
With global temperatures rising, the poles are warming even faster. Recent data show Antarctica is heating up at twice the global average rate.
Despite the Antarctic winter – around now should be the coldest time in the world’s coldest place – with temperatures around minus-20 Celsius, this anomaly remains the most significant globally, according to weather models. For the coming 10 days, temperatures in parts of East Antarctica
are expected to stay 20 to 30 Celsius above the norm. July temperatures have been consistently high, peaking 12 Celsius above average in late July.
The South Pole station has been set to experience its warmest July since 2002, with temperatures about 6.3 Celsius above average, reported Antarctic temperature analyst Stefano Di Battista.
From July 20 to 30, 2024, the station's average temperature was minus-47.6 Celsius, similar to the end of summer in Antarctica. Vostok, located at the centre of the eastern ice sheet, will also see its warmest July since 2009, about 6.5 Celsius above average.
“The heat wave on the Antarctic Plateau is extraordinary more for its duration than for its intensity, although some values are notable,” Di Battista told the Post.
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Recent data show Antarctica is heating up at twice the global average rate. / Jason Auch
Antarctic winter temperatures vary greatly due to the lack of sunlight, but this heat wave represents a significant deviation from the norm. The precise causes are still being investigated, but scientists suggest a connection to events occurring 30 kilometres above the surface in the stratosphere.
The stratosphere contains a polar vortex, a cold air band around each pole. Typically strong in the Southern Hemi- sphere winter, this year it has been disrupted by atmospheric waves, leading to a sudden stratospheric warming event, Amy Butler from NOAA told the Post. This has resulted in record high temperatures in the stratosphere.
The sudden stratospheric warming is also having an impact
on the lower atmosphere where weather occurs. This warming has weakened the jet stream, allowing frigid air from the South Pole to move northward, affecting regions such as New Zealand, southern Africa and southern South America. Consequently temperatures in East Antarctica have risen sharply.
Much of the world’s ice is stores in the Antarctic, and if it all melts, average sea levels would rise 46 metres, say researchers,
Ben Noll, a New Zealand meteorologist, was quoted as saying that atmospheric pressures over East Antarctica have reached unprecedented levels, describing the current Southern Hemisphere weather as "a little wild."
Other factors might be exacerbating the heat wave. Antarctic sea ice cover is at its second-lowest for this time of year,
just above the record lows of 2023. Sea ice helps regulate temperatures by reflecting sunlight and acting as a barrier between cold air and warmer waters, which have been unusually warm this year.
Blanchard suggested that reduced sea ice and warmer Southern Ocean waters could be contributing to the warmer winter weather in Antarctica. This trend might make significant heat waves in Antarctica more expected compared with years with average sea ice conditions.