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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 10:47 AM Feb 2014

Climate change is slowly but steadily cooking the world’s oceans

Because the ocean’s so big—it takes up more than 70% of the planet’s surface—it absorbs a lot of energy without anyone being much the wiser. Here’s a look at data for the upper 2,000 meters (1.14 miles) of the global ocean. Check out the three-month moving average for the last quarter of 2013, via the National Oceanographic Data Center, which actually goes off the chart:

​ National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC)

Roughly speaking, from about 1980 to 2000, the ocean gained around 50 zettajoules (ZJ, or 1021 joules) of heat. But from 2000 to 2013, it added another 150 ZJs of heat. Of course, even if you knew what a zettajoule is, it’s hard to envision what this means. Science Skeptic, a blog on climate change, offers this useful analogy: Over the last half-dozen or so decades, the ocean’s been storing the heat energy equivalent of about two Hiroshima bombs per second. Worryingly, that rate’s picking up, with around four bombs per second stored in the last 16 years.

In 2013, however, the ocean gained the heat equivalent to about 12 bombs per second, says Science Skeptic.

That adds up to more than 378 million atomic bombs a year worth of heat. That’s troublesome, considering that warmer waters are thought to make hurricanes and typhoons more severe, including Typhoon Haiyan, which ravaged the Philippines in 2013. Warmer waters also cause global sea levels to rise, threatening property values and exacerbating flooding.


more

http://qz.com/173647/climate-change-is-slowly-but-steadily-cooking-the-worlds-oceans/

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Climate change is slowly but steadily cooking the world’s oceans (Original Post) n2doc Feb 2014 OP
Interesting. And worrying. But is it enough to make people pay attention? randome Feb 2014 #1
This has been way overlooked jsr Feb 2014 #2
Thermal Expansion Lasher Feb 2014 #3
Curiously, that's also why we're experiencing an ice age in the NE while California is in a drought. BoneDancer Feb 2014 #4
All the extra heat has to go somewhere ... Scuba Feb 2014 #5
Science: Why was it ignored? Ezlivin Feb 2014 #6
K&R Duppers Feb 2014 #7
At the surface, Edim Feb 2014 #8
 

randome

(34,845 posts)
1. Interesting. And worrying. But is it enough to make people pay attention?
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 10:58 AM
Feb 2014

Storms and floods are too slow-moving and inconsistent to get people off the fence. I wish studies like this would focus more on quantifiable dangers that climate change will cause. Like crop failures. Starvation. The death of ocean life.

I think most people see this and their eyes glaze over. The ocean is storing a lot of heat. That doesn't resonate with day-to-day activities.
[hr][font color="blue"][center]"There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in."
Leonard Cohen, Anthem (1992)
[/center][/font][hr]

Lasher

(27,626 posts)
3. Thermal Expansion
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 11:06 AM
Feb 2014

When water heats up, it expands. About half of the past century's rise in sea level is attributable to warmer oceans simply occupying more space.

 

BoneDancer

(32 posts)
4. Curiously, that's also why we're experiencing an ice age in the NE while California is in a drought.
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 11:24 AM
Feb 2014

It's counter-intuitive, so don't try to explain it to Republicans. The polar vortex is real and it was there long before anyone knew there WAS a north pole.

Ezlivin

(8,153 posts)
6. Science: Why was it ignored?
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 01:55 PM
Feb 2014

That will be the question that future generations will ask.

In our defense, all I can say is that some of us listened and took action, but not enough people joined us.

Duppers

(28,125 posts)
7. K&R
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 03:45 AM
Feb 2014

Wonder if there are any DUers still not accepting these facts? I hope they've been enlightened or are gone.

Edim

(300 posts)
8. At the surface,
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 04:36 AM
Feb 2014

temperature indices seem to be shifting to cooling. Here for example global SST and AMO.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadsst2gl/plot/hadsst3gl/plot/esrl-amo

Global sea ice is at the ~30 years average.

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